If you manage cybersecurity for a company, you already know the pain. Your security team has to juggle multiple sources of threat intelligence, vulnerability data, compliance updates, and incident trends just to figure out what needs fixing first. That fragmented approach makes it hard to get a clear picture of your actual risk. InfoSight, Inc. recently announced a new threat intelligence dashboard built to solve exactly that problem.
The Threat Intel Dashboard lives within the Mitigator Cybersecurity Risk & Threat Intelligence Platform. It gives CISOs, CSOs, and senior technology leaders a centralized view of current cyber risk posture, active threats, sector-specific intelligence, and recommended remediation actions. Instead of bouncing between tools, you get a single place to assess what matters most and act on it.
One Dashboard to Consolidate Fragmented Threat Data
Security teams today often juggle a dozen different tools—SIEMs, threat feeds, vulnerability scanners, and compliance trackers—each showing a piece of the picture but never the whole story. That fragmented approach makes it hard to connect the dots between a new CVE, a spike in dark web chatter, and a pending regulatory update. A true threat intelligence dashboard changes that by pulling everything into one unified view. Instead of logging into separate platforms, you get a single pane of glass that combines threat intelligence, risk indicators, vulnerability exposure, sector-specific cyber activity, dark web intelligence, regulatory updates, and recommended actions. This is unified threat intelligence in practice: data that was once scattered becomes actionable context.

The dashboard doesn’t just show raw feeds—it organizes them into an executive-ready summary. You’ll see your current cyber risk posture at a glance, plus breaking cybersecurity news that might affect your industry. A sector-specific threat matrix highlights the most relevant attack vectors, while active CVE tracking and exposure indicators tell you which vulnerabilities need immediate attention. For organizations running industrial control systems, the board includes OT/ICS/SCADA threat monitoring alongside dark web monitoring integration to catch leaked credentials or ransomware chatter. Compliance updates and a platform exposure watch round out the view, all paired with clear action plans. What data sources are consolidated? Everything from internal vulnerability scanners to external threat feeds and legal bulletins—so you can stop hunting for information and start making risk decisions.
From Multiple Feeds to One Executive View
Rather than flipping between a dozen tabs, your team can review the entire threat landscape in one place. The dashboard’s design prioritizes clarity over complexity: an executive summary of your cyber risk posture sits next to breaking news, active CVE indicators, and compliance updates. CVE tracking is baked in, so you know exactly which known vulnerabilities affect your environment. Dark web and ransomware intelligence surfaces early warnings, while OT/ICS/SCADA monitoring covers operational technology risks. This consolidated approach turns noisy data into a coherent story, helping you prioritize actions based on real-time risk rather than guesswork.
Prioritizing Actions in a Rapidly Changing Threat Landscape
Even with a unified view of your threat data, the next challenge is knowing which alert to act on first. Modern organizations face a rapidly changing threat environment — from active exploitation and ransomware campaigns to AI-enabled attacks, identity compromise, supply chain exposure, and OT/ICS risk, all under increasing regulatory pressure. A threat intelligence dashboard that simply lists everything would still overwhelm you. That is where prioritization becomes critical.

The dashboard surfaces recommended remediation actions so you do not have to guess what matters most. Instead of hunting through raw logs or pivoting between separate tools, you see a clear order of operations. This is threat prioritization in practice: the system weighs factors like active exploit availability, asset criticality, and business impact to tell you which vulnerability to patch first or which alert to investigate immediately.
Translating Technical Threats into Business Risk Decisions
Ray Arteaga, Senior VP of Advisory Services at InfoSight, noted that security leaders need clear, actionable intelligence to make faster decisions. The InfoSight dashboard delivers exactly that by mapping technical findings to business context. A high-severity vulnerability on a non-critical server might rank lower than a moderate issue affecting your customer-facing application. This approach turns raw threat data into actionable intelligence that fits your specific environment.
Beyond just listing priorities, the dashboard integrates with existing remediation workflows. You can assign tasks, track progress, and verify fixes — all from the same interface. This helps your team move from identifying threats to resolving them without switching between systems. The result is a practical, step-by-step process that keeps your security posture strong even as new risks emerge daily.
Executive-Ready Reporting for Board and Leadership
Once your team has a clear workflow for handling threats, the next challenge is communicating that work to the people who need to understand it at a strategic level. That is where this threat intelligence dashboard truly shines. It is designed for business-level risk decisions, not just technical details. Instead of drowning your leadership in raw logs or alerts, the dashboard translates complex security activity into a language that executives and board members can act on.
This tool supports stronger executive and board reporting by giving leadership a clearer view of the organization’s risk environment. You can show them the current threat tempo—how fast new risks are appearing—and your security priorities without requiring them to learn cybersecurity jargon. It answers the question: “What makes it ‘executive-ready’?” The answer is in how it presents data: as clear trends, risk levels, and actionable summaries that tie directly to business impact.
Closing the Gap Between Technical and Business Teams
For many organizations, the gap between the security team and the board is a major pain point. The security team knows the technical details, but the board needs to understand risk in terms of business continuity and financial exposure. This dashboard bridges that gap. It offers board-level cyber reporting that is concise and focused on outcomes. You get an executive summary dashboard that highlights what matters most: where your organization is vulnerable, what threats are active, and what steps are being taken. This makes risk communication straightforward and builds trust between technical staff and leadership. When everyone speaks the same language, decisions about security investments and priorities become faster and more confident.
How the Threat Intel Dashboard Fits Into the Mitigator Platform
That clarity between technical teams and leadership is exactly what the threat intelligence dashboard delivers – and it does so as part of a larger ecosystem. The dashboard is a core component of the Mitigator platform, which InfoSight, Inc. provides as a cybersecurity, risk management, and managed security services provider. Rather than being a standalone tool, the dashboard integrates directly with the broader Mitigator platform features, giving you a centralized view of threats alongside other critical security functions.

InfoSight supports regulated and security-sensitive industries with a full suite of services, including cybersecurity assessments, managed security operations, vulnerability and threat management, risk management, advisory services, compliance support, and security awareness training. The threat intelligence dashboard pulls data from these various sources, turning fragmented threat signals into a cohesive risk picture. For example, findings from a recent vulnerability assessment can appear in the dashboard alongside real-time threat intelligence from managed security operations, helping you prioritize actions without switching between multiple consoles or spreadsheets.
Leveraging InfoSight’s Full Service Ecosystem
If your organization already uses other InfoSight capabilities – such as risk management or compliance support – the dashboard becomes even more valuable. It acts as a single pane of glass that correlates information from those services. You might see a compliance gap flagged by an assessment mapped directly to an active threat mentioned in the dashboard, making it easy to understand the real-world impact. For those not yet using the full cybersecurity risk management suite, the dashboard can still connect with external tools your team already relies on, such as SIEM systems or vulnerability scanners. This integration reduces manual data gathering and helps you stay ahead of threats without adding complexity. For organizations that prefer outsourced expertise, InfoSight’s managed security services can feed analysis directly into the dashboard, so you get curated risk insights even if your in-house team is lean. Ultimately, the dashboard isn’t just a feature – it’s the connective tissue that makes the Mitigator platform more than the sum of its parts.
Who Benefits Most? Industry Use Cases and Availability
This practical threat intelligence dashboard isn’t a catch-all solution—it’s tailored for the organizations that face the highest stakes. The dashboard is now available to Mitigator users, which means it plugs directly into a platform already trusted by security-sensitive teams. The primary targets? Regulated and security-sensitive industries where a single missed signal can lead to compliance fines, data breaches, or operational shutdowns. Think finance, healthcare, energy, and government sectors—any industry where a threat intelligence dashboard isn’t a luxury, but a necessity for daily operations.
Addressing Compliance and Sector-Specific Threats
If you work in regulated industry cybersecurity, you know the drill: auditors demand real-time visibility, and attackers probe for weaknesses around the clock. The dashboard helps by filtering global threat data into intelligence that matters for your specific risk profile. For example, a hospital might need to spot ransomware targeting patient records, while a utility company watches for malware aimed at industrial control systems. This focused approach supports compliance frameworks like PCI DSS, HIPAA, or NERC CIP without drowning your team in noise.
For CISOs and security operations leads, the dashboard delivers threat intelligence for CISOs who need to translate raw data into boardroom-ready decisions. InfoSight backs this with services like cybersecurity assessments, managed security operations, vulnerability and threat management, risk management, advisory services, compliance support, and security awareness training—all of which bolster the insights you see on screen. This suite means you’re not just getting a threat intelligence dashboard; you’re getting an ecosystem that supports compliance audits and daily triage alike.
As for availability: the dashboard is included with the Mitigator platform, but specific dashboard licensing details and pricing haven’t been disclosed publicly. That likely means you’ll need to contact InfoSight for a quote tailored to your organization’s size and risk needs. So, which industries benefit most? Any sector where compliance pressure and threat complexity run high. Is there an additional cost? Pricing is likely tied to your existing Mitigator agreement, so expect a conversation about your environment rather than a fixed price tag. If your industry lives under constant regulatory scrutiny, this dashboard is worth exploring.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the threat intelligence dashboard help prioritize actions for security teams?
It uses risk scoring and contextual analysis to rank threats by severity and relevance to your environment. The dashboard highlights the most critical incidents first, so your team can focus on what needs immediate attention. This cuts down on alert fatigue and wasted effort.
What makes the threat intelligence dashboard ‘executive-ready’ compared to other security tools?
It translates complex threat data into clear, visual summaries and plain-language risk reports. Executives get a high-level view of organizational risk without needing technical expertise. The dashboard also supports customizable views for different stakeholders, from analysts to leadership.
Does the dashboard support real-time monitoring and alerting?
Yes, it ingests and analyzes threat data in real time from integrated feeds. You can set up custom alerts for specific threat types or risk thresholds. This ensures your team is notified immediately of new, actionable threats as they emerge.






