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A 2023 RSA Innovation Sandbox Contest Finalist Has Its First Major Funding Round
A finalist in RSA Conference’s prestigious Innovation Sandbox contest completed its first major funding round to extend its capabilities from code security to pipeline security.
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Silicon Valley-based Endor Labs received $70 million to move beyond protecting open source software and get into locking down the CI/CD pipeline, validated secrets and configuration repositories, said co-founder and CEO Varun Badhwar. The Series A round was led by Lightspeed Venture Partners and Coatue, and Badhwar said Endor should be able to achieve profitability without any additional funding.
“Most companies have not focused their attention on controls and securing the CI/CD pipeline,” Badhwar told Information Security Media Group. “Code security and pipeline security are natural extensions.”
Endor Labs was founded in 2021 and emerged from stealth in October under the leadership of Badhwar and Dimitri Stiliadis, who previously scaled Palo Alto Networks’ Prisma Cloud business to $300 million in annual recurring revenue in just three years. Badhwar previously started and led RedLock while Stiliadis started and led Aporeto, which were purchased by Palo Alto Networks in fall 2018 and December 2019.
Protecting the Pipeline
Badhwar said pipeline security has become more understood in recent years with the U.S. government pushing the software bill of materials, making it a budget greenfield for most organizations. The current generation of pipeline security tools creates a lot of noise for organizations since they can’t ascertain whether an exposed secret has actually been validated or is a dummy or test secret, Badhwar said.
Organizations today often depend on 10 or 20 different tools to get visibility into their development pipeline, which Badhwar said is very inefficient. Badhwar said Endor Labs can now safeguard the entire software supply chain from the code that developers write to the code that developers bring in through open source libraries – as well as the code as its moving through the development pipeline.
“Code security and pipeline security are natural extensions.”
ā Varun Badhwar, co-founder and CEO, Endor Labs
Several large companies have in recent years said their source code repositories were compromised, leading to exposed secrets and keys accessible in S3 buckets. Endor Labs has also invested in controlling access in code repositories since developers frequently come and go while third-party consultants and external contributors need access to the repositories for a limited period of time, Badhwar said.
Expanding Beyond North America
From a geographic standpoint, Endor Labs wants to expand from being focused exclusively on North America to generating at least 25% of its revenue from outside the region a year from now. Endor Labs competes most frequently against software composition analysis tool makers such as Snyk and Synopsys, and it excels at giving developers time back to write software by cutting most erroneous vulnerability noise (see: Sonatype, Snyk, Synopsys Top SW Comp Analysis Forrester Wave).
From a metrics standpoint, Badhwar said Endor Labs will track customer count, net revenue retention and sales efficiency to ensure the company is scaling in a disciplined and financially sound fashion. The company serves organizations in verticals ranging from banking to e-commerce to retail with anywhere between 100 and tens of thousands of engineers where lots of software is being written internally.
“We’re currently engaged in various stages of implementation and evaluation with several of the largest banks in the country,” Badhwar said. “We are very excited about the value we bring by giving developers time back to actually write software.”