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The digital landscape across Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) (APEJ) is characterized by rapid growth in the acceptance of Managed Detection and Response (MDR), and driven by a corresponding surge in cyber threats, according to IDC’s just released report IDC MarketScape: Asia/Pacific (Excluding Japan) Managed Detection and Response Services 2025 Vendor Assessment. IDC recognized Trustwave, A LevelBlue Company, as a Leader in the report. According to IDC's Future Enterprise Resiliency and Spending Survey, conducted in June 2025, a staggering 77% of APEJ enterprises were hit by a ransomware attack in the past 12 months. Even more alarming, 48% of these organizations reportedly paid a ransom of up to $1 million. This underscores not just the frequency of attacks, but the devastating financial impact. The IDC report noted that as organizations in the region navigate accelerated cloud adoption, hybrid work models, and a sophisticated adversary landscape, the traditional approach to security is no longer sufficient. The urgency for advanced security capabilities has never been greater, and this is where MDR is emerging as the essential foundation for business resilience. For years, many organizations relied more strictly on traditional Managed Security Services (MSS), which primarily focused on monitoring logs and ensuring compliance. MDR, however, represents a fundamental shift, IDC said. MDR services are a distinct, proactive category of security service centered on: In the face of complex adversaries and growing regulatory pressure, organizations across financial services, government, manufacturing, healthcare, and critical infrastructure now view utilizing an MDR security service not as an optional add-on, but as a board-level priority vital to maintaining operations and trust, the IDC report said. When asked which technologies were effective in preventing attacks, enterprises in APEJ highlighted a mix of endpoint, network, and analytics-driven tools. Network detection and response (NDR) emerged as the most effective technology, with 47% of enterprises indicating it successfully prevented attacks. This was followed by identity analytics and user and entity behavior analytics (UEBA) at 37% and endpoint detection and response (EDR) at 35%. Security information and event management (SIEM) was cited by 31% of organizations, while packet capture and network packet monitoring (PCAP/NPM) ranked at 28%. Network Detection and Response (NDR) emerged as the leading technology. This suggests that threats involving lateral movement, network-level anomalies, and the exploitation of inter-system communication are a major concern, and enterprises are seeing the value of network visibility alongside endpoint protection (EDR). MDR providers in APEJ are rapidly evolving their offerings to meet the dynamic threat landscape: 1. MDR and Incident Response Convergence The line between MDR and Incident Response (IR) is blurring, IDC noted. Leading MDR vendors are now building comprehensive IR readiness into their core services. This includes: 2. Verticalized Use Cases and Compliance Security is not one-size-fits-all. MDR delivery is increasingly being tailored for regulated sectors like BFSI (Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance), Healthcare, and Critical Infrastructure. Providers are focusing on: 3. Hyper-Customized Threat Intelligence Generic threat feeds are no longer enough. MDR providers are moving beyond standard lists of Indicators of Compromise (IOCs) to deliver highly contextual and actionable intelligence: This personalized approach drastically reduces noise and false positives, leading to faster investigations and shorter response times—critical outcomes that define the success of an MDR engagement in APEJ’s high-stakes cyber environment. While AI is being used to enrich this intelligence, human validation remains crucial to ensure accuracy and applicability in complex regional environments. In short, MDR is the new backbone of resilience, enabling APEJ enterprises to move from simply monitoring threats to actively hunting, containing, and recovering from them with speed and intelligence.Beyond Monitoring: The Rise of MDR
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