AI-Powered and Human-Driven: The Future of SecOps
Today, Security operations centre (SOC) teams spend too much of their time filling in the gaps left by their traditional tools—and attackers are taking advantage.
Armed with the latest technology, like generative AI, and spurred on by a $9.5 trillion cybercrime economy in 2024,1 attackers are innovating faster than ever.
Defenders need new solutions and methodologies to stay one step ahead – but what does the future of SecOps look like? The most successful SOC teams won’t be the ones that automate the most—they’ll be the ones that empower analysts most effectively with AI-powered security tools amplifying human strengths.
Join Scott Woodgate, GM of Threat Protection at Microsoft, to explore the future of the SOC and learn how Microsoft’s unified security platform enables proactive, scalable and deeply integrated defence strategies that empower teams to stay ahead of threats with agility and confidence.
Agenda highlights:
Defenders need new solutions and methodologies to stay one step ahead – but what does the future of SecOps look like? The most successful SOC teams won’t be the ones that automate the most—they’ll be the ones that empower analysts most effectively with AI-powered security tools amplifying human strengths.
Join Scott Woodgate, GM of Threat Protection at Microsoft, to explore the future of the SOC and learn how Microsoft’s unified security platform enables proactive, scalable and deeply integrated defence strategies that empower teams to stay ahead of threats with agility and confidence.
Agenda highlights:
- The current state of SecOps – today’s threat landscape and traditional SOC approach.
- Explore the new Microsoft Sentinel data lake – Unify signals, cut costs, and power agentic AI.
- The augmented SOC – Maximising human and machine intelligence.
- Navigating the transition to tomorrow’s SOC – how to transform your security operations.
1 “Cybercrime To Cost The World $9.5 trillion USD
Annually In 2024,” Cybercrime Magazine, October 2023
Speaker

Scott Woodgate
General Manager, Threat Protection, Microsoft

