At Future Synch, we review startups regularly — not to rank them, not to pitch them, but to look at the market through two lenses at once: as an entrepreneur who builds, and as an operator who executes.
Tines operates in a domain with genuine urgency: security teams are overwhelmed, automation is no longer optional, and the cost of under-staffed incident response is measurable. The structural growth question is whether the company positions as a powerful workflow tool — or as the orchestration infrastructure the SOC cannot operate without.
Security teams are overwhelmed with repetitive workflows. Automation inside security is no longer optional — it is operationally necessary. Tines is positioned at the intersection of no-code usability and enterprise-grade security, with product-led credibility in technical communities.
Security automation has direct cost implications: headcount efficiency, response time reduction, incident cost containment. This is a mission-critical domain with dedicated budget lines — not a discretionary technology purchase.
Tines operates in a domain where the urgency is structural. Security teams do not have the option of staying manual.
Is Tines a workflow tool or a security infrastructure layer? Security automation vendors often sound similar: 'Automate workflows.' 'Reduce manual tasks.' 'Connect tools.' If positioning remains feature-centric, category compression follows — and pricing power weakens against both SOAR vendors and broader automation platforms.
Security teams don't buy automation. They buy reduced mean time to response (MTTR), lower burnout, and controlled hiring costs. If cost-per-incident reduction isn't quantified, executive alignment slows. The CISO may champion the product — but the CFO needs a different story.
Enterprise security software faces long procurement cycles, security validation audits, integration concerns, and deep risk aversion. Without a tightly structured proof-of-value model with pre-agreed KPIs, pilots extend indefinitely and expansion stalls.
Tines must make a clear strategic decision: is it a complementary automation layer — or the backbone orchestration system inside the SOC? These are different companies with different pricing models, different expansion logic, and different investor narratives. The market needs a clear answer, and the internal resource allocation depends on it.
Translate automation into hard economics. Shift messaging from 'automate security workflows' to 'Reduce MTTR by X% and increase incident handling capacity per analyst by Y%.' Publish benchmark metrics tied to operational outcomes.
Package a defined 60-day enterprise proof-of-value. Pre-defined incident types, baseline operational metrics, and clear post-implementation delta measurement. Objective: convert technical validation into CFO-visible ROI.
Clarify the infrastructure thesis. Make the strategic decision explicit — in investor narrative, in enterprise pricing, and in sales materials. Complementary layer or SOC backbone? These require different go-to-market motions.
Build verticalised security playbooks. Select 1–2 high-pressure verticals — fintech, healthcare. Build automation templates tied to compliance requirements, audit-readiness, and industry-specific incident types. This increases defensibility and accelerates enterprise trust.
Security positioning clarity is not branding. It is survival. The companies that win in enterprise security are the ones budget owners understand — not the ones practitioners love.
No-code is a feature description. SOC efficiency infrastructure is a budget category.
Tines operates in a domain where the budget exists, the urgency is structural, and the buyer mandate is clear. The structural growth work is translating genuine technical capability into the economic language that drives CISO and CFO alignment simultaneously.
The SOAR category is crowded. The companies that escape category compression are the ones that own a measurable operational outcome — and make the proof-of-value so clear that expansion becomes inevitable.
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