Push Security, a startup that secures employees’ use of online applications and services, has recently announced its Series A funding of $15 million, which brings its total investments to $19 million. Led by GV (Google Ventures), the new round saw participation from Decibel and several angel investors.
The London-based company provides enterprises with a centralized view of usage to secure SaaS (software-as-a-service) work applications. It notifies employees of weak passwords and inadvertently shared links, and helps security teams address errors. Push Security supports monitoring of Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 and delivers notifications over Slack or Microsoft Teams.
Launched in July 2022, Push Security’s solution works on desktops and laptops. It notifies the security team when a new application is added and flags high-risk integrations that require excessive data permissions. Its dashboard provides an overview of employee usage of online applications, monitoring even sensitive ones that employees onboard themselves.
Push Security’s solution provides enterprises with an efficient and secure way to monitor employee use of online applications and services. It notifies employees of potential errors, flags high-risk integrations, and adds applications to a centralized dashboard for monitoring.
In summary, Push Security’s Series A funding of $15 million brings the total investments in the company to $19 million. Led by GV (Google Ventures), the new round also saw participation from Decibel and several angel investors. The company provides enterprises with a centralized view of usage to secure SaaS applications and flags high-risk integrations. It also monitors employee usage of online applications and services and notifies security teams when a new application is added.
Key Points:
– Push Security raised $15 million in Series A funding
– Total investments in the company are now at $19 million
– Led by GV (Google Ventures)
– Monitors employee usage of online applications and services
– Notifies security teams when a new application is added
– Flags high-risk integrations
– Provides a centralized view of usage to secure SaaS applications