Already protected at the network?
Now protect where attacks execute.
Your existing stack may protect the network, collect logs and generate alerts. QuickSecure protects the endpoint execution layer with autonomous behavior analysis, explainable decisions, real-time remediation and self-healing resilience.
The question is valid: “Do we really need another security product?”
Yes, the question is valid. Most organizations already have firewalls, endpoint tools, SIEM, SASE, SOC or MDR services. QuickSecure is not built to replace every part of that stack.
QuickSecure is built for the endpoint action gap: the gap between seeing a signal, understanding what it means, deciding what to do, and acting directly on the device.
Where existing platforms are strong
A modern enterprise stack is layered by design, and each category below solves a real problem well. QuickSecure is built to operate alongside these layers, not against them.
| Platform category | Where it is strong |
|---|---|
| Firewall / NGFW | Network traffic control, VPN, IPS, segmentation and perimeter policy. |
| SASE / ZTNA | Secure user access, cloud access and distributed workforce protection. |
| SIEM / SOAR | Log collection, correlation, compliance, dashboards and SOC workflows. |
| MDR / Managed SOC | Human-led monitoring, investigation and escalation. |
| EDR / XDR | Endpoint telemetry, detection, hunting and cross-domain investigation. |
Where QuickSecure fits
QuickSecure focuses on the execution layer: what happens inside the endpoint after access is granted, after traffic reaches the device, and after a user or process starts interacting with the operating system.
QuickSecure analyzes
- Process behavior
- Suspicious command chains
- Registry persistence
- File activity
- Credential access indicators
- Ransomware-like behavior
- Local anomalies
- Endpoint health and protection continuity
QuickSecure can produce
- Explainable AI decisions
- Blocked / remediated / would-block outcomes
- Incident timeline
- Evidence checkpoints
- Local remediation actions
- Tenant-specific baselines
- Policy-driven response
- SIEM / SOC-ready telemetry
What QuickSecure can replace
QuickSecure can replace or reduce the need for:
- Traditional antivirus-only protection
- Basic endpoint protection tools
- Lightweight endpoint monitoring agents
- Manual endpoint triage workflows
- Some standalone ransomware / persistence monitoring tools
- Some internal scripts or manual remediation procedures
- Basic endpoint incident visibility for organizations that do not operate a mature SOC
For many organizations, QuickSecure can replace legacy antivirus or basic endpoint protection layers. For more mature enterprises, it can run as an independent endpoint defense and remediation layer alongside their existing EDR/XDR or SIEM stack.
What QuickSecure does not try to replace
QuickSecure does not replace:
- Hardware firewalls or NGFW platforms
- SD-WAN infrastructure
- SASE / ZTNA access platforms
- WAF products
- Full enterprise SIEM platforms
- Human-led MDR services
- Cloud posture management platforms
QuickSecure does not replace these categories because they solve different problems. It strengthens the stack by acting at the endpoint execution layer.
Why a Fortinet customer may still need QuickSecure
If a municipality or enterprise already uses Fortinet, that is a strong network security foundation. Fortinet may protect traffic, VPN, segmentation, IPS and perimeter policy.
QuickSecure adds protection after traffic reaches the endpoint:
- What process started?
- Was the command chain suspicious?
- Did a persistence mechanism appear?
- Was credential access attempted?
- Did ransomware-like file behavior begin?
- Was the action blocked or remediated?
- Can the security team see why?
Why a Microsoft Defender, CrowdStrike or SentinelOne customer may still need QuickSecure
For customers with mature endpoint tools, QuickSecure can act as an independent explainable defense layer. It can provide second-opinion behavior analysis, local remediation, tenant-specific baselining, and evidence-rich incidents.
QuickSecure is especially useful when the customer wants more transparent endpoint decisions, faster local action, simpler incident understanding, and an additional autonomous remediation layer.
Why a SIEM / SOC customer may still need QuickSecure
SIEM platforms are excellent at collecting and correlating logs. But they often depend on the quality, clarity and actionability of incoming signals.
QuickSecure can feed the SOC with endpoint incidents that already include:
- Decision explanation
- Evidence
- Timeline
- Remediation outcome
- Blocked / would-block / remediated status
- Tenant / device context
The simple answer
You need QuickSecure if you want endpoint-level action, not just visibility.
You need QuickSecure if you want to know:
- What happened on the device?
- Why was it risky?
- What evidence supports the decision?
- Was it blocked, remediated, or only observed?
- Can the device recover if the protection layer fails?
- Can endpoint decisions be sent to the existing SOC / SIEM stack?
Protect the execution layer.
Your existing tools may already protect the network, access layer, cloud environment and SOC workflow. QuickSecure adds autonomous endpoint defense where attacks actually execute.