The company teaching the security operations center to stop chasing alerts - and start running like a nervous system that never sleeps.

THE MARK. Netenrich's wordmark, the calling card of a 900-person outfit that has quietly become the SecOps whisperer for Google's security stack.
Caption: A SOC analyst, three monitors deep, decides which of 4,000 alerts might actually be the one. This is the moment Netenrich was built for.
Somewhere right now, a security analyst is staring at a wall of alerts - red, amber, blinking, urgent, and mostly meaningless. The industry's standard answer to this misery has been to go faster. Netenrich's answer is heresy: stop optimizing for speed. Optimize for being right.
That distinction - the company calls it the move "from efficiency to efficacy" - is the whole personality of this San Jose firm. Founded in 2004, long before "AIOps" was a slide in anyone's deck, Netenrich has spent two decades on the unglamorous plumbing of digital and security operations. It is not a household name. It is the name the household names quietly call.
Today the work runs on a platform called Resolution Intelligence Cloud, built on top of Google SecOps. It ingests the firehose, applies agentic AI and big-data analytics, and hands humans a short list of things that actually matter - with the context to act. The destination, Netenrich says, is "autonomic" security operations: a system that, like breathing, mostly runs itself.
It is a tidy ambition with an untidy reality underneath - hundreds of deployments, a 900-person team, and a founder on his third act. Let us walk the floor.
Caption: Six things that live inside one platform. Each one exists to delete a 2 a.m. headache.
The brain. Turns security and operations data into prioritized, actionable intelligence using AI and big data, built on Google SecOps.
Managed detection and response that runs on a continuous loop of data, detection, and response engineering - AI agents plus human experts, not a static one-size-fits-all service.
A model for business-first CIOs, CTOs, and CISOs who now share responsibility for safeguarding the enterprise - aligning security ops with business risk.
Advisory, implementation, migration, and managed operations to adopt, optimize, and scale Google Security Operations and Chronicle.
Netenrich's proprietary threat-intelligence engine, deployed inside Adaptive MDR. Yes, the acronym is a pun.
Detection and response engineering tuned for the messy reality of multi-cloud and hybrid-cloud environments.
Caption: An illustrative read on where Netenrich spends its attention versus the legacy SOC playbook. Directional, not audited.
Caption: He sold the chips. He chaired the ops company. Now he is after the SOC.
A serial Silicon Valley entrepreneur. Before Netenrich he founded Velio Communications (acquired by LSI Logic and Rambus) and chaired the board of OpsRamp (acquired by HPE). He started Netenrich in 2004 and has steered it from SaaS digital operations into AIOps and cybersecurity. MBA from St. Mary's College of California; B.Tech from Kakatiya University. On the side, he backs an organic-farming venture - a long way from log files.
Around him sits a security-heavy bench - CTO Praveen Hebbagodi (former co-founder of ThreatLandscape), CISO and Head of Security Strategy Chris Morales, plus a roster of CISSP-credentialed architects. The org is built to recruit and keep scarce cybersecurity talent, a theme the leadership writes about openly.
Named Google Cloud Partner of the Year for Security: Managed Security Service Provider.
Earned the Google Cloud SecOps Service Delivery designation.
Launched Adaptive MDR for Google Chronicle Security Operations, powered by Resolution Intelligence Cloud.
Closed a reported $1.6M funding round.
Founded in San Jose as a digital-operations company - before the buzzwords arrived.
Caption: Pull up a chair. The platform explains itself better in motion.
Return to that analyst and the screaming dashboard. In Netenrich's version of the night, the wall of 4,000 alerts has already been read - by agents that never blink and a platform that knows what last Tuesday looked like. What lands in front of the human is short: a handful of incidents, ranked, with context attached and the next move suggested.
The screaming stops. Not because the threats stopped - they never do - but because someone decided that the point of security operations was never to react faster. It was to be ready. That is the small, stubborn idea Netenrich has been building around since 2004, and it is why, when the household names need their own 2 a.m. handled, they call the quiet company in San Jose.