Define an adoption strategy
This article is part of a series to provide guidance as you design a cloud security posture management (CSPM) and cloud workload protection platform (CWPP) solution across multicloud resources with Microsoft Defender for Cloud.
Goal
Consider your high-level business needs, the resource and process ownership model for your organization, and an iteration strategy as you continuously add resources to your solution.
Get started
Think about your broad requirements:
Determine business needs. Keep first steps simple, and then iterate to accommodate future change. Decide your goals for a successful adoption, and then the metrics you’ll use to define success.
Determine ownership. Figure out where multicloud capabilities fall under your teams. Review the determine ownership requirements and determine access control requirements articles to answer these questions:
- How will your organization use Defender for Cloud as a multicloud solution?
- What cloud security posture management (CSPM) and cloud workload protection (CWP) capabilities do you want to adopt?
- Which teams will own the different parts of Defender for Cloud?
- What is your process for responding to security alerts and recommendations? Remember to consider Defender for Cloud’s governance feature when making decisions about recommendation processes.
- How will security teams collaborate to prevent friction during remediation?
Plan a lifecycle strategy. As new multicloud resources onboard into Defender for Cloud, you need a strategic plan in place for that onboarding. Remember that you can use auto-provisioning for easier agent deployment.
Next steps
In this article, you've learned how to determine your adoption strategy when designing a multicloud security solution. Continue with the next step to determine data residency requirements.