top of page

Tanium Bets Big on Autonomous IT — and Shows Its Hand at Converge 2025

At its 10th annual Converge conference this week, Tanium rolled out one of its most sweeping product waves in years — a clear sign the company is trying to cement itself as the operating system for fully autonomous IT. And if the message wasn’t obvious from the demo-heavy keynotes, CTO Matt Quinn spelled it out himself:


“Tanium continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible by leveraging AI and real-time endpoint intelligence to empower organizations to move from reactive to autonomous operations,” he said. “Unveiling these innovations at our Converge conference is especially meaningful… these advancements deliver end-to-end outcomes at speed and scale — all through a single, unified platform.”


For an industry still wobbling between AI hype and AI panic, Tanium’s pitch was unapologetically confident: IT can run itself — or at least get a lot closer than it is today.


Agentic AI Becomes the Centerpiece


The star of the show was Tanium’s expansion of agentic AI, a category companies are racing to define as enterprise workflows shift from human-triggered scripts to self-steering, AI-powered operational agents.


Two major debuts stood out:


• Tanium Ask — an AI Ops Control Room


Tanium framed Ask as the beginning of its “autonomous operations layer,” a conversational interface that doesn’t just answer questions but performs work. Administrators can query system behavior, troubleshoot issues, summarize dashboards, or trigger remediations — all inside a single AI-driven workflow.


Security teams get their own perks: Ask can ingest and enrich alert data, then propose or execute triage steps without forcing analysts to hop between tools.


• Tanium AI Agent for ServiceNow — ITSM With a Brain


With the agent embedded directly into ServiceNow’s Now Assist framework, an opened incident can instantly pull live device telemetry — running processes, app versions, recent activity, hardware status — without waiting for a technician to go hunting.


From the chat window, admins can act immediately: reboot a device, uninstall software, or initiate a guided workflow recommended by the agent.


It’s the kind of integration that turns the usual “copy data → switch tab → investigate → switch tab → remediate” slog into something dangerously close to autonomous ITSM.


Endpoint Management Goes Everywhere — Including Industrial Floors


For years, Tanium has argued that fragmented device oversight is the enemy of resilience. At Converge, the company made a grab to close that gap across three very different domains:


• Operational Technology (OT)


Tanium is now pushing directly into factories, energy sites, hospitals, and industrial control environments. Its new OT management capabilities extend real-time visibility into assets like HMIs and PLCs — areas that have traditionally resisted modern tooling.


The pitch: unify IT and OT into a single operational fabric before attackers exploit the blind spots.


• Mobile (iOS & macOS)


Management for Macs, iPhones, and iPads enters the fold, giving enterprises a way to enforce configurations, monitor fleet posture, and take remote action across a distributed workforce.


• Connector for Microsoft Intune


Rather than competing with Intune, Tanium now ingests and correlates data from Intune-managed devices, producing unified reporting and enabling fast remediation across the entire mobile + desktop landscape.


The takeaway: Tanium wants to be the “single source of truth” for endpoints, no matter where they sit or what manages them today.


Security Operations Gets Its Own Autonomy Layer


The security announcements were more surgical but aimed at long-standing operational pain points:


• Tanium Jump Gate


A just-in-time, just-enough-access system built to kill standing privileges — an essential Zero Trust tenet that many organizations talk about but rarely implement cleanly. Jump Gate piggybacks on Tanium’s existing client footprint, giving teams a way to tightly control and audit sensitive access in real time.


• HuntIQ


Instead of selling more dashboards or detections, Tanium is embedding its own threat hunters directly into customer environments — a blend of expertise and automation meant to help organizations close their “visibility gaps” faster and mature their SOCs without waiting for new hires.


The Big Picture: Tanium Is Positioning Itself for the Autonomous IT Era


Tanium’s platform already spans patching, telemetry, configuration, compliance, and security. But this year’s Converge showcased a shift: the company isn’t just layering AI on top of IT workflows — it’s trying to rewire them so the platform can act on its own.


If Tanium’s vision plays out, the future won’t be dashboards and scripts. It’ll be self-directed agents coordinating IT, OT, mobile, and security as one continuous system.


Autonomous IT has been a buzz phrase for a while. Tanium’s trying to make it sound inevitable.

bottom of page