By Elías Cedillo Hernández
CEO & Founder of Grupo BeIT, BuróMC and Elit Infrastructure Services
In today’s environment, operational continuity no longer depends solely on equipment availability or robust infrastructure. Increasingly, it depends on the ability to prevent, analyze, and respond in real time to events that impact both technological operations and production processes.
Today, the SOC (Security Operations Center) and NOC (Network Operations Center) have evolved from reactive functions into strategic business components. They are no longer isolated monitoring centers; they are critical enablers that keep operations active, secure, and under control.
The New Operational Reality
The digitalization of industrial processes, along with the adoption of OT (Operational Technology), IoT, and interconnected systems, has exponentially increased the attack surface and operational risk.
A network incident, an unattended alert, or a security breach can lead to:
- Unplanned production downtime
- Loss of inventory or raw materials
- Contractual non-compliance
- Regulatory impacts
- Reputational and financial damage
According to recent reports from IBM and the Ponemon Institute, the global average time to identify and contain a security breach has exceeded 270 days in recent years, and in industrial environments, every hour of downtime can represent losses worth millions.
This is where SOC and NOC stop being simple support functions and become essential operational continuity enablers.
NOC: Operational Stability Before the Impact Escalates
The Network Operations Center (NOC) is responsible for the availability, performance, and stability of technological infrastructure, including:
- Networks
- Connectivity links
- Servers
- OT and industrial platforms
- Critical production systems
A mature NOC should not only respond to failures — it must anticipate them. Through continuous monitoring, event correlation, and performance analysis, it enables organizations to:
- Detect degradations before they become failures
- Prevent interruptions in production lines
- Ensure service levels
- Reduce unplanned downtime
In environments where production runs continuously, lack of network visibility is one of the greatest operational risks.
SOC: Security as an Operational Enabler
While the NOC protects availability, the Security Operations Center (SOC) protects the integrity and reliability of operations.
Today, more than 60% of incidents causing production downtime originate from cybersecurity-related events: compromised credentials, malware, unauthorized access, or human error.
A SOC enables organizations to:
- Detect threats in real time
- Correlate security and operational events
- Respond early before production is impacted
- Reduce exposure and containment times
- Protect IT and OT environments in an integrated manner
Without a SOC, incidents are often detected only after the damage has already occurred.
Today, the question is no longer whether an incident will occur, but how prepared the organization is to prevent, detect, and contain it before it impacts production.
SOC and NOC are not cost centers. They are resilience mechanisms, operational continuity drivers, and business protection enablers. In an environment where downtime is not an option, visibility and early response make the difference between continuity and crisis.
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