DisruptOps raises $9M Series A with serial entrepreneur, cyber security veterans taming the cloud

March 10, 2020  |  Startland News Staff

Jody Brazil, Rich Mogull, and Mike Rothman, DisruptOps

With security threats to cloud-enabled businesses outpacing the ability of most companies to respond, a fresh funding infusion is expected to help DisruptOps strengthen its team and its ability to react, said Jody Brazil.

The Kansas City startup — a SaaS-based cloud security management platform that helps enterprises address the critical challenges of cloud security at scale — announced Tuesday a $9 million Series A funding round from Drive Capital and existing DisruptOps investor Rally Ventures.

“Our cloud-native platform is designed to ensure that organizations can take action quickly and effectively when identifying misconfigurations and threats,” said Brazil, CEO of DisruptOps. “We’re excited to partner with Drive Capital and our existing investors to secure every company in the cloud.” 

Click here to learn more about DisruptOps.

Brazil previously served as CEO and co-founder of Firemon, which sold to Insight Venture Partners in 2014 and was a spin-off of FishNet Security, where Brazil was CTO. Brandy Peterson, DisruptOps CTO, also spent more than 15 years as CTO of FishNet. (FishNet Security sold in 2013. Both Firemon and Fishnet were led by Gary Fish, who later founded Fishtech Group.)

DisruptOps co-founders Rich Mogull and Mike Rothman are principals of security research firm Securosis.

Brandy Peterson, DisruptOps

Brandy Peterson, DisruptOps

The $9 million investment aims to help DisruptOps scale its go-to-market capabilities and accelerate product development to meet growing market demands, the company said in a release.

“Global organizations are rapidly expanding into the cloud, and while the cloud can lead to amazing business outcomes of increased agility, cost savings, flexibility, and innovation — the reality is that cloud at scale breaks security,” DisruptOps said in the release. “These cloud environments consist of multiple teams deploying hundreds of applications across multiple cloud accounts. This complexity leads to unmanaged risk and has led [to industry predictions] that over 99 percent of all cloud security failures will be the customer’s fault.”

With DisruptOps at the center of three technology mega-trends — cloud, security and automation — the firm is uniquely positioned to aid those customers before it’s too late, said Andy Jenks, partner at Drive Capital.

“The ability for organizations to remediate cloud issues and quickly respond to attacks will completely change how these companies secure their cloud,” he said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Kansas program aims to create startups with public-private partnerships

    By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2016

    A new Kansas program is tapping universities to incentivize residents to launch more startups through public-private partnerships. The Kansas Department of Commerce recently kicked off “JumpStart Kansas Entrepreneurs” in the hopes that it will spur economic growth in the Sunflower State via early-stage firms. “The program is designed to stimulate and grow the economy from…

    Humanizing text analysis, Stride marches to international growth

    By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2016

    Computers can do a lot these days, but they can’t process feelings. After all, that’s what sets humans apart from machine — right? Not necessarily it seems, as one Kansas-City based artificial intelligence firm is challenging that notion with its text-analyzing tech that not only identifies subjects but also a writer’s sentiment. A graduate of…

    Idle Smart earns $125K in national clean energy program

    By Tommy Felts | December 1, 2016

    Idle Smart recently was dubbed a top clean-energy firm and won some substantial investment capital for its technology. Based in Kansas City, Kan., the company was voted by its peers as the top firm in the Energy: US 2016 program, nabbing $125,000 for its smart thermostat device for fleet vehicles, such as semi-trucks. The company’s…

    With KC startup Edcoda, students learn as wizard saviors

    By Tommy Felts | December 1, 2016

    Across the U.S., student engagement is declining. By the time students reach high school, 2 out of 3 them will become disengaged, according to Gallup’s 2015 figures. But one Kansas City-based startup is working to change that by making fun a top priority. Edtech startup Edcoda created the 3D, online role-playing game Coda Quest, which…