Microsegmentation is a critical component of any organization’s Security Operations (SecOps) policies. It puts up barriers to ensure an intruder cannot proceed further. The methodology can be observed in advisory models. Most advisory models are detached from operational realities. They offer broad assessments without regard for region-specific needs, industry constraints, or the actual experience of users. Speaking strictly from the perspective of barriers limiting movement, we can state that this misalignment effectively ends up trapping businesses in information silos.
The result? Companies end up choosing platforms that don’t fit their required use cases. Rollouts stall. Adoption suffers. And promising vendors get lost in the noise. For the InfoSec domain, this issue is particularly serious. Miscalculations about security stack can lead to security blind spots, inefficiencies, frustrated users, and higher costs.
The following are the fallout of just using software that does not fulfill organizational use cases.
1. Security Gaps and Increased Risk
Unprotected Assets: Some systems or workflows may not be covered by the software.
Bypassed Controls: Users might find ways around security because the tool doesn’t support their needs (e.g., blocking a legitimate use case).
Compliance Issues: The organization might fail audits if the tool can’t enforce required controls across all environments.
2. Fragmented Security Architecture
Teams may have to introduce additional tools to cover the gaps. This leads to tool sprawl, increasing the attack surface and operational complexity. In addition, lack of integration between tools can make it harder to detect and respond to threats quickly.
3. User Frustration and Workarounds
Employees may become frustrated and use shadow IT (unauthorized tools/services) to get their job done. This introduces unmonitored risk — a big problem for sensitive data environments like finance, healthcare, or law.
4. Wasted Investment
The company pays for capabilities it can’t fully use or doesn’t get ROI due to partial fit.
Hence, QKS Group’s SPARK PlusTM. SPARK Plus™ brings together rigorous analysis, verified buyer insights, and deep contextualization to empower both sides of the tech ecosystem. The platform’s key differentiators are as follows:
Guidance that reflects a buyer’s actual operating environment by industry, region, and company size rather than generic market snapshots.
Evaluation of over 5,000 vendors, including expert reviews and experiential data from real users in live deployment environments. This creates a grounded view of how products actually perform under pressure.
Transparent Analyst Advisory on Vendors: SPARK Plus™ focuses on clarity, translating analysis into structured insights that directly support vendor selection, procurement, and go-to-market strategies.
A Platform for Both Buyers and Vendors: SPARK Plus™ recognizes that meaningful decisions happen on both sides. For buyers, it offers alignment and assurance. For vendors, it provides visibility in the places that matter most, emerging geographies, niche sectors, and underexplored use cases.
Industry-Specific SPARK Matrix™: Evaluate vendors through an industry lens, using criteria tailored to domain-specific needs. Get full visibility into parameter-level ratings across all vendors, enabling clear, contextual, and relevant comparisons.
And last, but probably the most important, regional SPARK Matrix™that assess vendors based on region-specific execution, capabilities, and compliance. Each vendor’s performance is transparently rated across every parameter, helping you make informed decisions based on local realities.
The platform currently covers various domains, including CX, AI, cybersecurity, and various enterprise software. Future expansions will integrate real-time buyer data, predictive vendor performance modelling, and customizable benchmarking for procurement teams and strategy leads.
