Securiti AI Supercharges Global Expansion as Enterprise AI Demands Collide with Data Security Imperatives
- Cyber Jill
- Jun 5
- 3 min read
As AI adoption surges across enterprises, the infrastructure required to secure and govern sensitive data is facing its own revolution. At the center of this upheaval is Securiti AI, which today announced a major expansion of its global go-to-market (GTM) leadership team amid what it calls “triple-digit quarter-over-quarter growth.”
The company, which has positioned itself as a linchpin in the emerging Data+AI Security space, is responding to a market that’s accelerating faster than most imagined. The expansion includes seasoned executives from Forgerock, BigID, Symantec, and Twilio—signaling that Securiti AI isn’t just chasing growth, it’s building a war chest of proven operators to scale globally.
“It is unique to find a company at the intersection of massive tailwinds, amazing technology and people, and high growth and adoption by global enterprises,” said Pete Angstadt, the newly appointed President of GTM, who previously scaled Forgerock from $50 million to $300 million in revenue.
Angstadt is joined by Nick Maxwell (VP & GM of EMEA), Todd Vancil (VP of Global Presales), and Cassandra Maldini (VP of AI Governance)—each bringing deep expertise across identity, data protection, sales engineering, and AI policy, respectively.
This buildout arrives at a crucial moment for the AI ecosystem. Enterprises are embracing AI agents, embedding models into SaaS workflows, and extracting competitive insights from proprietary datasets. But that same data—the lifeblood of modern AI—has become a liability if not protected and governed with precision.
“Securiti AI is at the forefront of solving one of the most urgent challenges in the modern enterprise—how to enable the safe use of data and AI,” said Rehan Jalil, CEO of Securiti AI.
A Command Center for the AI Age
Securiti AI’s flagship platform, the Data+AI Command Center, is designed to help enterprises understand, control, and govern their proprietary data—often dispersed across clouds, SaaS tools, and internal systems—before it’s consumed by AI models. At the heart of the platform is a knowledge graph architecture that maps data lineage, contextual risk, and AI usage in real time.
That architecture is key in a post-ChatGPT world where AI tools can be embedded almost anywhere, often without centralized oversight. “Shadow AI” is quickly replacing shadow IT, and companies that don’t tighten control around data usage could face regulatory risk or reputational fallout.
The company's traction is evident. Securiti AI counts numerous Fortune 500 firms as customers and has recently partnered with tech heavyweights like NVIDIA, HPE, AWS, and Databricks—further embedding itself into the infrastructure of modern AI development. It was also named the leading DSPM (Data Security Posture Management) vendor for the second consecutive year.
AI Governance Comes Into Focus
One notable appointment—Cassandra Maldini as VP of AI Governance—underscores the increasing regulatory and ethical complexities surrounding enterprise AI. As AI regulations evolve globally, from the EU AI Act to emerging U.S. frameworks, companies are under pressure to establish internal policies that balance innovation with accountability.
Maldini’s resume spans AI compliance roles at Snowflake, Twilio, and Asurion, giving her a front-row seat to how major platforms operationalize trust and transparency in machine learning deployments.
Looking Ahead
The combination of enterprise-grade infrastructure, AI-native governance tools, and deep leadership experience may position Securiti AI as a bellwether in the fast-evolving market for data and AI security.
As AI transitions from experimentation to mission-critical deployment, the need to lock down sensitive data without stifling innovation is no longer optional—it’s existential. With this latest leadership expansion, Securiti AI is staking its claim as a critical control layer in the AI tech stack.
And with enterprises racing to build smarter, faster, and more autonomous systems, there’s little doubt that data—and the security wrapped around it—will define the winners in this new era.