As Africa’s digital economy expands, the regulatory and security landscape is becoming increasingly complex. Financial services, fintechs, healthcare providers, and public institutions are scaling across fragmented cloud environments and multiple jurisdictions — making annual compliance checks and spreadsheet-based audits insufficient for modern risk management.
To bridge this gap, Lagos-based cybersecurity firm Cybervergent has raised a $3m seed round to scale its AI-native posture management and governance orchestration platform. The round was co-led by emerging market-focused venture firms Ventures Platform and Atlantica Ventures, both Nigerian-owned. The deal continues a broader trend of Nigerian VCs backing foreign startups or local companies with continental ambitions, as Nigeria’s economy faces mounting macroeconomic challenges.
Moving from reactive to continuous compliance
For many African enterprises, managing security posture has traditionally been a reactive, periodic exercise. Cybervergent is attempting to shift this to a continuous process.
The company’s infrastructure allows organisations to monitor, manage, and improve their security and regulatory compliance in real time. Rather than treating governance as a box-ticking exercise, the platform positions security posture as a business-critical function tied to operational resilience and customer trust.
By the numbers, Cybervergent currently reports:
- 150+ enterprise customers across West, East, and Southern Africa.
- 4,500+ regulatory and security controls cross-mapped across various frameworks.
- Up to 70% acceleration in compliance, risk, audit, and data security initiatives through automation.
“We built Cybervergent to make digital trust a continuous reality for organizations across Africa, from high-growth startups to established industry leaders,” says Adetokunbo Omotosho, co-founder and CEO. “As the digital and regulatory landscape matures and the scale of digital risk grows, so must our focus.”
The 11-year bootstrap
While this is the company’s first major venture capital injection, Cybervergent is not a new player in the ecosystem.
Originally founded in 2012 as Infoprive by Omotosho — a former cybersecurity lead at Nigerian fintech giant Interswitch — the company opted to bootstrap for over a decade. The strategy was deliberate: building a profitable foundation and validating the product through retainer and subscription revenue before taking on external capital and the growth metrics that accompany it.
In October 2023, the 60-person company rebranded to Cybervergent, transitioning from a heavy focus on consulting to offering a proprietary, scalable AI-driven software platform.
What the $3m will do
With the new capital, Cybervergent has outlined two clear operational priorities:
- Regional Expansion: Deepening its presence across the continent and entering new markets. A key focus will be building infrastructure that aligns with specific local data residency laws and regional compliance frameworks.
- Product Development: Expanding its AI-native architecture. The technical roadmap includes building deeper automation into governance workflows, stronger orchestration across risk systems, and more advanced posture intelligence capabilities.
The backing from Ventures Platform and Atlantica Ventures underscores a growing investor appetite for B2B infrastructure and digital trust platforms capable of securing Africa’s rapidly maturing tech ecosystem.

