Move beyond periodic assessments and compliance theatre. Introspectus enables you to deliver continuous, evidence-based assurance across cyber security, operational performance, and software management. Insight that stands up to audit, executive, and regulatory scrutiny.
The platform gives you the tools to have better, more informed conversations with clients at every level. Translate complex technical findings into clear business-relevant insight for senior leaders, boards, and audit committees, positioning yourself as a trusted long-term advisor rather than a transactional vendor.
Introspectus is built to support managed service delivery. Each module can be offered as a recurring service, giving you a scalable, low-overhead revenue stream that grows with your client base.
Replace fragmented tools, manual reporting, and spreadsheet-based compliance tracking with a single integrated platform. Consistent visibility across your entire client base means less time on administration and more time delivering value.
Introspectus partners receive training and enablement, executive-ready reporting, remediation guidance aligned to the Essential Eight, and commercial models designed to support long-term service delivery.
Introspectus is developed locally, with Australian regulatory expectations built in. Partners can confidently position the platform with clients operating in regulated industries, government supply chains, and environments with DISP obligations.
Complete the form and a member of our team will be in touch to discuss the program and get you set up.
Introspectus provides partners with the tools and support needed to succeed.
Platform onboarding and ongoing education to support confident deployment within client environments.
Access to control-level remediation advice aligned with Essential Eight maturity requirements.
Dashboards and reports suitable for delivery to boards, leadership teams and audit committees.
Pricing structures designed to support managed service delivery and long-term client engagements.
We work closely with our partners to ensure they can confidently deploy, position and support the platform within their client environments.
Each agent compares the current patch list against what is actually installed on its device. Any gap between what has been released and what is deployed is immediately surfaced. Critically, Introspectus pays particular attention to the timing of patch deployment not just whether a patch is present, but when it was applied.
This temporal dimension is central to Essential Eight compliance, where the difference between a patch applied on day two versus day thirty can mean the difference between maturity levels, and between an environment that was protected and one that was exposed.
This combination of daily patch intelligence, severity-based filtering, agent-level validation, and deployment timing analysis gives organisations a real-time, evidence-based view of their operating system patch posture mapped directly to the ISM controls applicable to the Essential Eight patch operating systems strategy.
The visibility gap here is particularly consequential. A patch may be approved and scheduled, yet never successfully applied due to a failed deployment, a device that was offline during the maintenance window, a reboot that was deferred, or a system that exists outside managed channels entirely.
Organisations that rely solely on deployment tooling to confirm patch status are measuring intent, not reality. The ACSC is explicit on this point: organisations need to confirm patches have been applied successfully, not merely that they were dispatched.
Within the Essential Eight framework, patching operating systems is a core and non-negotiable control. The ACSC sets clear expectations: patches for internet-facing infrastructure must be applied within 48 hours when identified as critical or where working exploits exist, and within two weeks for standard releases.
Patches for workstations, servers, and network devices must be applied within one month, with tighter timeframes applying in high-threat environments. Critically, the ACSC also mandates that vulnerability scanning occurs at least daily for internet-facing systems and at least fortnightly for workstations and non-internet-facing infrastructure not to replace patching, but to confirm it has actually occurred.
From this inventory, Introspectus performs targeted web intelligence gathering. For each application identified, the platform locates the top five authoritative sources of patch and release information vendor security advisories, release notes, and vulnerability databases and retrieves that content into a central repository.
Aletheia, Introspectus’s AI analysis agent, then reads and analyses this content to extract the intelligence that matters for application patching: the latest available version, whether a release addresses a security vulnerability, the severity of that vulnerability, and all information relevant to the Essential Eight application patching requirements. This structured intelligence is mapped directly to the applicable ISM controls, producing defensible, audit-ready evidence of an organisation’s application patch compliance posture.
A critical and frequently overlooked problem is the visibility gap. Organisations may believe their applications are current when, in reality, patches have silently failed, devices have missed deployment windows, or software has been installed outside of managed channels entirely.
Without continuous inspection at the endpoint level, these gaps go undetected until an audit or, worse, a breach.
Within the Essential Eight standard, patching applications is a dedicated and non-negotiable control. The ACSC specifies clear timeframes: critical vulnerabilities in internet-facing services must be addressed within 48 hours, commonly used applications such as office productivity suites, web browsers, email clients and PDF software must be patched within two weeks of release, and all other applications within one month.
For organisations in high-threat environments, the bar is higher still. Meeting these requirements consistently across hundreds of distinct applications deployed across thousands of endpoints is not achievable through manual effort alone.