Governance & Risk Management
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Operational Technology (OT)
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Video
CMO Mike Plante on Nozomi Expanding Industrial Reach, Operating as Independent Unit
Becoming part of Mitsubishi Electric will help Nozomi evolve from using data primarily to detect security threats to using data to optimize operational performance.
See Also: From Data to Decisions: Maximizing Operational Efficiency Through IT-OT Integration
Nozomi Chief Marketing Officer Mike Plante said as part of Mitsubishi, the data collected from industrial environments such as factories, refineries and mines can help in exploring new use cases including efficiency improvement, predictive maintenance and anomaly detection. While cybersecurity will continue to be the foundation, Plante said Nozomi’s platform can deliver value to both CISOs and operations leaders (see: Mitsubishi Electric to Buy Nozomi in $883M OT Security Deal).
“We see a possibility to bring the Mitsubishi insights in the operating environment together with our insights in the cybersecurity realm, leveraging the same abilities to collect data, understand that data and the context around it and figure out what AI to apply, so that not only will we be able to deliver cybersecurity outcome, but now start to look at what operational outcomes we can deliver,” Plante said.
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Plante also discussed:
- How Nozomi embedded cybersecurity software in Mitsubishi’s PLC;
- Why Nozomi plans to stay operationally independent post-acquisition;
- Opportunities for an expanded client footprint through Mitsubishi’s networks.
Plante was previously CMO at Revver, where he developed a go-to-market strategy that helped ignite significant growth in annual recurring revenue, while successfully rebranding the company. Prior to Revver, Plante was CMO at Shape Security, the world leader in application security, continuing that work as vice president of product marketing at security leader F5 after its acquisition of Shape.

