Adoption
The team adopted OpenCTI step by step, starting with report ingestion and workbench usage, then expanding to entity extraction and automation. After validating the platform with the Community Edition, the company upgraded to Enterprise features, which enabled it to manage new functionalities. These include information requests from teams across the organization who have questions about campaigns, geopolitical developments, specific vulnerabilities, and more. Previously handled without a formal structure, these requests could now be integrated directly into OpenCTI via a dedicated information request workflow.
Throughout the deployment, the relationship with the Filigran team proved to be just as important as the technology itself. “The support portal and dedicated Slack channel made a real difference. We always feel heard and our priorities are taken seriously,” recalls the CTI Analyst. “New features are constantly being developed, and the enhancements we request often get implemented. This is very helpful for us.”
How Filigran helps
Faster intelligence workflows save 15 workdays monthly
OpenCTI enabled the seamless migration of a large-scale indicator dataset from the legacy TIP, ensuring no loss of coverage during the transition. By unifying all this intelligence into a real-time workflow, OpenCTI reduced report processing time from 30 minutes to just 10 minutes — saving 15 workdays per month. This efficiency gain enables the team to process more reports than ever before each month. “OpenCTI has fundamentally changed the way we run intelligence,” shares the Cyber Threat Intelligence Analyst. “We’re now operating much more efficiently. That’s a huge shift for our team.”
From 3 knowledge bases to 1 intelligence hub
By consolidating intelligence into a single source of truth, the company eliminates silos, ensures uniform, high-quality analyses, and preserves institutional knowledge. “Besides, a single system is cheaper to maintain than three!” the CTI Analyst adds.
The practical impact is tangible. When management requested a consolidated view of intelligence products, what would previously have taken several days of manual filtering was accomplished in about an hour using entity-based queries and the PyCTI library. “Automatically collecting metrics and building queries into a unified dashboard has been incredibly useful to both our team to check on our targets and our leadership to ensure we are prioritizing effectively and our impact is felt,” says the CTI Analyst.
Faster and defensible risk decisions
Discussions about vulnerability management are no longer driven solely by technical severity levels. The CTI team can now support remediation decisions with real-time contextual intelligence, eliminating ambiguity and internal debate. Risk assessments are documented, traceable, and easier to justify — both operationally and at the executive level — strengthening alignment across different intelligence departments. “We can now track the fidelity of our intelligence in close to real-time,” notes the CTI Analyst.
High-integrity intelligence under strict access controls
Fine-grained access controls now guarantee that restricted government-sourced data remains protected, while preserving the analytical relationships between entities. “Being able to control who sees what is a major capability for us,” says the CTI Analyst.
The Road Ahead
Now that a solid intelligence foundation has been established, the cyber threat intelligence team is focusing on the next stage of maturity: smart automation. OpenCTI has already streamlined ingestion and analysis, and artificial intelligence represents the next frontier.
“AI is the hot topic right now. We want to leverage AI to improve our processes and reduce the time analysts spend on repetitive tasks,” explains the Cyber Threat Intelligence Analyst.
By continuing to work hand in hand with Filigran, the organization will further consolidate data quality, save time across its processes, and develop higher value-added strategic intelligence.