556 signals analyzed across 12 merged scans of Meridian Edge Partners's footprint - LinkedIn, SEC EDGAR, channel press, vendor newsrooms, and Google News. 555 net-new this week, 90 dark-intel hits, 2 from named employees at Meridian Edge Partners or alliance/competitor organizations. Sorted, prioritized, and turned into revenue plays.
Every signal worth acting on this week, sorted into the plays a Norvian Security channel manager runs. The numbers below come from this week's scan, not a template.
Stratacore Networks told its partners this week that legacy DLP renewals are going up 18% - the second increase in twelve months, compounding to a 31% lift on accounts that have not re-evaluated since 2024. Price increases on aging platforms are how incumbents harvest installed bases they no longer invest in, and customers know it: the renewal conversation stops being procurement and starts being an architecture question the moment the number moves.
For Meridian, the exposure map is the opportunity map. The accounts carrying Stratacore DLP in Meridian's base skew financial services - exactly where examiner pressure on AI usage is forcing data-governance reviews anyway. A renewal letter plus a regulator question is two reasons to take the same meeting, and the Norvian one-day shadow-data assessment is built to be that meeting: it produces findings the incumbent's own console has never shown the customer, on the customer's real estate, before the renewal signature.
Helixguard shipped an AI inventory module this week - cloud workloads only, with on-prem and hybrid estates explicitly out of scope at launch. Read it the way a channel exec should: a funded competitor just spent its launch window educating the market that AI data governance is a budget line. Category validation is free advertising for whoever covers the rest of the problem.
The rest of the problem is the half enterprises actually fear. Regulated customers do not run clean cloud-only estates; their sensitive data lives in file shares, legacy databases, and twenty years of departmental sprawl - precisely where Norvian's agentless coverage reaches and Helixguard's launch scope does not. Every Helixguard pitch this quarter will surface the hybrid question, and the seller in the room with the hybrid answer wins the evaluation that follows.
Identra and Norvian published the joint zero-standing-privilege reference architecture: Identra supplies the identity context - who can reach what - and Norvian supplies the data posture - what that data is, where it flows, and which AI systems consume it. Reference architectures matter to SIs for an unglamorous reason: they pre-answer the solution-design hours that make a two-vendor deal slower than a one-vendor deal, which is usually why two-vendor deals die.
For Meridian this lands at the exact right moment: an award-winning Identra practice (their Northeast Growth Partner of the Year win this week), a new AI Security Assessment practice hunting for differentiated methodology, and a joint architecture that gives both practices one story to sell. The services attach is doubled - identity integration on one side, classification and remediation workflow on the other.
Meridian Edge Partners launched an AI Security Assessment practice this week - a two-week packaged engagement for regulated customers, staffed with six consultants and sponsored from the office of the CTO. For a national SI, a packaged assessment is not a press release; it is a quota line. Someone in Meridian leadership now owns selling this every quarter.
The practice has a gap Norvian fills by design. An AI assessment without data lineage is an interview exercise: the consultants can inventory which AI tools exist, but they cannot show which sensitive data actually feeds them. Norvian's agentless lineage is the difference between a slide deck and a finding the customer's auditor will accept. Whoever powers the first three assessments becomes the practice's default tooling - and the practice becomes that vendor's recurring distribution.
Identra named Meridian its Northeast Growth Partner of the Year on 60% year-over-year joint enterprise growth. Partner awards are usually noise; this one is a map. It means Meridian has live executive relationships, recent wins, and open invoices inside a specific, knowable set of identity accounts - and Identra is Norvian's keystone alliance, with a published joint reference architecture connecting identity context to data posture.
The joint story converts directly: every account where Meridian deployed Identra has already answered 'who can reach what' - and not one of them can answer 'what does that access actually expose, and what is it feeding.' That second question is the Norvian attach, sold by the same Meridian team that just won the award, into accounts where their credibility is at its peak.
The data security and alliance conference circuit for Norvian Security, with the move to make at each. Where Meridian Edge Partners customers, Norvian Security allies, and competitors will be.