Today is a very proud day. ServiceNow has just completed its acquisition of Armis.
This is a moment of immense pride, not just for me and my co-founder Nadir Izrael, but for every single member of the Armis team who has poured their heart and soul into building this company over the last decade.
When we started Armis in 2016, we had a clear mission: to help organizations and governments solve their toughest cybersecurity challenges by protecting all of the connected assets in their environment. We often think back to our early customers and how their trust in us to deliver on our promise shaped where we are today. We knew then what’s held true; this area of risk only continues to grow as the world transforms at cloud speed and AI scale. As it has, Armis has also accelerated our innovation pipeline to secure the entire spectrum of connected assets – IT, OT, IoT, medical devices, critical infrastructure, cloud and code – powering our customers with trusted, groundbreaking solutions to continuously protect their expanding attack surfaces.
Now, that mission finds its ultimate home. By joining ServiceNow, we aren’t just integrating two companies; we are creating the world’s first unified, end-to-end security exposure management and operations stack. Certainly, it’s a momentous day in the history of both companies.
The combination of Armis’ deep, contextual knowledge of cyber exposure management and security with ServiceNow’s world-class workflow automation and its robust existing security business represents a monumental shift for the IT and security industry. For years, organizations have struggled with siloed security, having the data to see a threat but lacking the automated connective tissue to fix it proactively and intelligently. Together, we are solving that.
By integrating Armis’ Cyber Exposure Management and Security Platform, Armis Centrix™, directly into the ServiceNow AI Platform, we will deliver a system of action that enterprises need to securely innovate and deploy agentic AI with trust and control at scale. I encourage you to dive deeper here and to read today’s blog by ServiceNow’s SVP and GM, Central Product Management and Security and Risk, John Aisien here.
Through this transition, we will not lose sight of the values Armis as a company holds dear. We are incredibly pleased to see these values align directly to ServiceNow’s values, one of which is customer obsession – or “wow our customers” – as ServiceNow puts it.
To our customers: you have been and always will be our North Star. This acquisition is, above all, a massive win for you. With Armis’ asset intelligence now feeding directly into the ServiceNow AI Control Tower, you will be supported with a centralized command center to govern your entire AI lifecycle and the physical and virtual infrastructure that supports it. Armis Centrix™ now operates with the full backing of ServiceNow’s product, engineering, and global go-to-market organizations. The Armis platform remains available as part of the ServiceNow AI Platform and as a standalone solution. We will continue to support you, now and in the future.
To our partners: today marks a significant day for you as well. Working with ServiceNow and Armis can immediately accelerate revenue by tapping into the soaring demand from organizations that are much in need of our solutions, jointly and individually. We encourage you to continue engaging with us – we are here to collaborate and to go faster, much further, together.
Over the past 10 years, I have often told our team that we are on a journey to claim our spot in the Cyber Hall of Fame. Today, we took a giant leap toward that goal.
Armis started with a dream to protect the world’s most critical infrastructure. Today, as part of ServiceNow, that dream has reached significant scale. We are energized, we are focused, and we are just getting started.
To our team, our customers and our partners, thank you for believing in the Armis vision. The best is truly yet to come.
We welcome you to continue on the journey with us. Read the press release from ServiceNow here and John Aisien’s blog here.