Security teams are being asked to do more with the information they already have. Reports come in with missing details. Related incidents sit in different places. Case summaries take time to prepare. Leaders still need a clear view of what happened, what changed, and where attention is needed.
AI can help with parts of that work, but it does not replace security judgment.
In our on-demand webinar, “Applying AI in Corporate Security: Views from Practitioners and Technologists”, hosted by ASIS, Resolver’s Artem Sherman, Division Head of Security & Investigations, and Jamie Dearnley, Chief Technology Officer, examine AI from two perspectives. Their discussion explores where security teams are finding value, where concerns remain, and what separates practical applications from experimentation.
Watch the replay to learn:
- How corporate security teams are evaluating AI today
- Where practitioners and technologists see AI differently
- Which security workflows show the strongest potential for AI adoption
- What concerns must be addressed before AI can be trusted in operational environments
- How organizations are moving AI from pilot projects into day-to-day security operations
Security teams need more than AI tools. They need structured workflows, consistent data, and clear operational processes. Resolver’s Corporate Security software was built around those needs. Our platform brings incident management, investigations, threat management, and security risk management together so teams can work from a shared source of information. That way, security teams gain visibility into activity across the organization, investigators have access to the context behind each case, and leadership can better understand emerging trends and areas of concern.
As organizations continue evaluating AI, the discussion cannot start and end with the technology itself. The quality of the underlying information, the processes used to manage it, and the visibility available to decision-makers remain equally important parts of the conversation.
Watch the replay to hear how security practitioners and technologists are approaching AI, where they see opportunities, and what questions still need answers.
Speakers