WideField Security Raises $11.3 Million Series A to Secure the Future of Digital Identity
November 1, 2025
byFenoms Startup Research

WideField Security, a rising force in cybersecurity, has raised $11.3 million in Series A funding to advance its mission of redefining how enterprises protect digital identity across SaaS, cloud, and hybrid environments.
The round was led by Crosspoint Capital Partners, with participation from Engineering Capital and other strategic backers. Together, these investors are fueling WideField’s vision to treat identity as the new data - and secure it with the same rigor, intelligence, and automation that modern organizations apply to information itself.
Founded by Abhay Kulkarni, WideField’s platform delivers real-time identity threat detection, adaptive protection, and automated response across the cloud security lifecycle.
“Just like data, identity must be protected at rest, in motion, and in use,” said Kulkarni. “We’re building the fabric that ensures identity remains secure everywhere it lives - across SaaS, cloud, and hybrid infrastructures.”
The New Security Frontier
As companies shift deeper into cloud-native environments, identity has become the new perimeter - and one of the most vulnerable. According to Verizon’s 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report, 74% of breaches involve the human element, including compromised credentials or stolen tokens.
Traditional perimeter-based defenses are no longer enough. Every employee, contractor, and device now acts as its own potential point of compromise. WideField’s platform brings clarity to this complexity, detecting identity misuse in real time and automatically isolating risk before it escalates into a breach.
It’s a product built not just for prevention - but for awareness, giving security teams full observability into who has access to what, when, and why.
A Market in Hypergrowth
The identity and access management (IAM) market is projected to reach $34.5 billion by 2028, growing from $16.1 billion in 2023 at a CAGR of 16.7% (MarketsandMarkets, 2025). Meanwhile, identity threat detection and response (ITDR) - the exact segment WideField is leading in - is estimated to top $7.8 billion by 2030, fueled by the shift to zero-trust architectures.
This growth reflects an undeniable truth: enterprises now see identity not as a credential, but as a living attack surface.
And that’s where WideField stands apart - by reframing identity from a security checkpoint to a continuously monitored system of trust. Its platform uses AI to correlate identity behavior across applications, detect privilege misuse, and automatically adapt security policies in response to anomalies.
But the real story here isn’t just about AI or automation. It’s about trust - and how protecting it is becoming the new business strategy.
When Security Becomes Strategy
WideField’s philosophy reveals something deeper about the evolution of tech itself. Security used to be reactive. You built walls, patched breaches, and moved on. Today, security is strategic infrastructure - the backbone of customer confidence and enterprise credibility.
Here’s where the insight for founders lives.
The companies defining the next decade aren’t just solving operational problems - they’re solving for trust at scale.
Every major industry transformation - payments, communications, data, and now identity - follows the same pattern: it begins with a technical problem, and ends with a psychological one. Stripe didn’t just make transactions easier; it made businesses feel safer to build online. Slack didn’t just connect teams; it made collaboration feel more human. WideField isn’t just stopping breaches; it’s creating an emotional baseline of confidence in an era of chaos.
That’s the lesson every founder should take from this: if your product makes people feel secure - whether that’s financial security, data integrity, or emotional reliability - you’re not just solving a problem. You’re creating permanence.
And permanence is what venture capital can’t buy - it’s earned through consistent, trustworthy design.
WideField’s rise shows that the next wave of market leaders will be those who engineer for trust, not just efficiency. In a world increasingly driven by AI, where algorithms make more decisions than humans, trust is the ultimate differentiator.
Backed by Cybersecurity Heavyweights
Crosspoint Capital Partners, which led the round, is one of the most influential firms in the cybersecurity ecosystem - with a track record of scaling companies like Forescout, ForgeRock, and Absolute Software. Engineering Capital, an early-stage deep-tech investor, also joined the round, reinforcing confidence in WideField’s technical moat and product scalability.
Their backing isn’t just financial - it’s strategic. Crosspoint’s investment network gives WideField access to key enterprise buyers and cybersecurity integrators, helping accelerate adoption across regulated industries like finance, healthcare, and defense.
“Enterprises today are not short on data. They’re short on confidence,” said Kulkarni. “Our mission is to give them both - real-time intelligence and trust they can depend on.”
Identity as the Heart of Zero Trust
Gartner forecasts that by 2027, 60% of organizations will have implemented an identity fabric - a unified, context-aware layer of identity control - up from just 20% in 2023. The zero-trust security market, driven by this evolution, is projected to reach $70 billion by 2032, growing at nearly 17% annually.
At the same time, AI-driven identity management is emerging as the most funded cybersecurity segment of 2025, according to PitchBook data, accounting for nearly 18% of all new security investments.
This isn’t just a technology wave - it’s a generational shift in how enterprises think about digital protection. The question is no longer if a breach will occur, but how fast you can detect and respond when it does.
WideField’s platform is built precisely for that reality: proactive, intelligent, and adaptive defense for the identity-first enterprise.
What’s Next for WideField
With fresh funding, WideField plans to expand its engineering and threat research divisions, deepen integrations with providers like Okta and Microsoft Entra, and launch its Identity Risk Intelligence module - an AI-driven system that ranks identity vulnerabilities by potential exploitability.
The company also aims to scale globally, focusing on enterprise partnerships in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific.
As digital transformation accelerates, WideField’s belief that “identity is the new data” is becoming less a slogan - and more a structural truth.
“You can’t automate trust,” Kulkarni said. “But you can build the systems that make it possible.”









