Zenity

Tel Aviv, Israel Information Technology Private

Zenity is a security and governance platform purpose-built for AI agents, copilots, and low-code/no-code applications. Its agent-centric platform helps enterprises discover, govern, and defend AI agents across SaaS platforms, cloud frameworks, and endpoints, structured around Observe, Govern, and Defend capabilities. Zenity surfaces shadow AI agents, maps permissions, tool integrations, memory usage, and behavioral patterns, and detects intent-driven risk across platforms such as Microsoft Copilot, Power Platform, Salesforce Agentforce, ServiceNow, ChatGPT Enterprise, and Amazon Bedrock. Founded in 2021 by Ben Kliger and Michael Bargury, Zenity is headquartered in Tel Aviv with a New York office.

Overview

Company data and valuation marks are estimates and may be incomplete, stale, erroneous, or revised.

Founded

2021

Employees

201–500

Total Funding

$59.5M

3 rounds

Funding

Total raised $59.5M across 3 rounds

Funding data and valuation marks are estimates and may be incomplete, stale, erroneous, or revised.

Last updated 06-25-2026

Latest Round

Type

Series B

Date

October 29, 2024

Amount

$38M

Valuation

Lead Investors

Third Point VenturesDTCP
DateRoundAmount RaisedValuationLead Investors
October 29, 2024 Series B $38M Third Point Ventures, DTCP
September 2023 Series A $16.5M Intel Capital
2021 Seed $5M Vertex Ventures, UpWest

Prominent Investors

Upwest Labs Gefen Capital Partners Vertex Ventures Intel Capital B5 Capital Partners

Leadership

  • Ben Kliger

    Co-Founder & CEO

    LinkedIn
  • Michael Bargury

    Co-Founder & CTO

    LinkedIn
  • Keren Herscovici

    VP of Finance and Corporate Development

    LinkedIn
  • Cinthia Portugal

    VP of Global Marketing

    LinkedIn
  • Harrison Johnson

    VP Partners & Alliances

    LinkedIn
  • Gal Malka

    VP of Software Engineering

    LinkedIn
  • Coley Burke

    VP Global Sales

    LinkedIn
  • Tomer Teller

    VP Product

    LinkedIn

Competitors

Competitor list is illustrative and may be incomplete, stale, or erroneous.

  • Nokod Security

    Israeli startup focused on application security for low-code/no-code platforms, directly overlapping with Zenity's original wedge.

  • Noma Security

    Security platform for the AI and data lifecycle, including AI agents and pipelines, competing with Zenity in the agentic AI security space.

  • Prompt Security

    Provides security and governance for GenAI applications and copilots within the enterprise, overlapping with Zenity's copilot security offering.

  • Lasso Security

    LLM and GenAI security platform protecting against prompt injection, data leakage, and adversarial misuse of AI applications.

  • Wiz

    Cloud security platform that has expanded into AI security posture management, competing in adjacent AI/agent security workflows.

  • Astrix Security

    Non-human identity security platform that overlaps with Zenity in governing AI agents, service accounts, and machine-to-machine access.

Zenity Investment FAQ

Public status and buying access

No. Zenity is a private company and does not have a public stock ticker or trade on a public stock exchange. Its shares are generally held by founders, employees, investors, and other private shareholders. Buyers and sellers may be able to transact in Zenity shares through private secondary transactions, but any transaction depends on share availability, buyer and seller agreement, transfer restrictions, company approval rights, and any applicable right of first refusal. There is no guarantee that Zenity will complete an IPO or other liquidity event.

Yes, it is sometimes possible to buy Zenity shares pre-IPO through private secondary transactions. This depends on finding a willing seller, company approval, and satisfying any transfer restrictions or rights of first refusal.

Buyers interested in buying Zenity shares on the secondary market typically do so through SetterVC and other secondary-market platforms, subject to eligibility requirements, share availability, transfer restrictions, and issuer approval. Buyers may need to satisfy sophistication, accreditation, institutional, platform, regulatory, or other eligibility requirements before participating. Once eligible, buyers may be able to view listings, make bids, and work with a licensed broker through the transaction process. Buyers should ensure they have appropriate legal and financial advisors guiding them before completing any transaction.

Valuation and funding

Zenity's latest disclosed funding round was a Series B round in October 29, 2024. The round raised approximately $38M, with Third Point Ventures and DTCP listed as disclosed lead or major investors. Primary funding rounds are different from secondary transactions: in a primary round, capital goes to the company, while in a secondary transaction, investors buy existing shares from current shareholders. Funding-round data reflects publicly reported or collected information and may be incomplete.

Zenity has raised approximately $59.5M in disclosed funding across 3 rounds. These figures reflect primary capital raised by the company and do not include every possible secondary transaction, undisclosed round, debt facility, or private transfer. Reported funding totals can change as new rounds are announced or older round details are corrected. Eligible users can use SetterVC to track Zenity's funding history alongside private-market activity where available.

Zenity's disclosed investors include Upwest Labs, Gefen Capital Partners, Vertex Ventures, Intel Capital and B5 Capital Partners. Investor lists are based on public reporting, company announcements, and collected funding-round data, and may be incomplete. Participation in a prior funding round does not mean those investors are currently buying or selling shares. On SetterVC, eligible users can review Zenity's funding history, valuation history, and private-market activity alongside other venture-backed companies.

Market context

Zenity's most-cited competitors include Nokod Security, Noma Security, Prompt Security, Lasso Security, Wiz and Astrix Security. Investors often compare these companies by sector, product focus, valuation, funding raised, growth signals, investor base, and private-market activity.

Secondary-market demand for Zenity shares can be affected by company performance, revenue growth, profitability, funding history, valuation, investor interest, sector momentum, public-market conditions, expected timing of a liquidity event, and the availability of shares for sale. Demand can also be affected by transfer restrictions, company approval rights, right of first refusal processes, limited information, and the price expectations of buyers and sellers. Strong demand does not guarantee strong pricing, liquidity, or investment returns. Weak demand does not necessarily reflect the company's long-term prospects. Demand signals should not be treated as a recommendation or prediction of investment performance. Buyers and sellers should treat demand signals as informational and conduct their own diligence before transacting.

Selling and transaction mechanics

Sellers often rely on intermediaries and platforms, such as SetterVC and other secondary-market platforms, to identify potential buyers. The exact process varies by company and transaction, but sellers often begin by confirming their ownership, desired price, transferability, and any company approval or notice requirements. If the seller agrees with a buyer on acceptable price and terms, the company may need to be notified through a share transfer notice or similar process. If a right of first refusal, company approval right, or other transfer restriction applies, the seller may need to wait until that process is completed. The parties may then execute a purchase and sale agreement, complete required transfer documentation, and close if all required conditions are satisfied. Sellers should always seek proper legal and financial advice before completing the transaction.

Yes, current and former Zenity employees, early investors, and other existing shareholders may be able to sell vested shares before an IPO through a private secondary sale. This is not automatic; it depends on whether the shareholder has transferable shares, whether there is buyer demand, and whether the company's governing documents permit the transfer. Many companies require prior notice, company approval, or a right of first refusal before shares can be sold. Sellers should also seek proper legal and financial advice before proceeding.

A Zenity secondary transaction usually involves an existing shareholder selling shares to a buyer before a public listing. The buyer and seller typically agree on price, number of shares, share class, and closing conditions. The seller may then need to notify Zenity through a share transfer notice or similar process. If Zenity or existing investors have approval rights, transfer restrictions, or a right of first refusal, those steps may need to be completed before the transfer can close. The parties typically enter into a purchase and sale agreement, complete any required transfer documentation, and close only if the necessary conditions are satisfied. Timing and certainty can vary by company and transaction.

In most private secondary transactions, parties commonly use a purchase and sale agreement that outlines price, terms, and conditions. They may also use share transfer documentation, often a stock transfer notice, share transfer notice, transfer instruction, or similar document, along with any required company approval or right of first refusal materials. Proof of ownership, such as a cap table entry, share certificate, brokerage statement, issuer confirmation, or administrator confirmation, may also be important. Buyers often request recent company financials, but private companies may limit disclosure. Since every deal varies, buyers and sellers should consult legal and financial advisors to understand which documents are needed.

Risk, diligence, and investor caution

Buying Zenity shares pre-IPO is risky. Shares are illiquid, no IPO or liquidity event is guaranteed, valuations can change, transfers may require company approval, and private companies may provide limited financial disclosure. Be prepared for total loss. SetterVC and Setter Capital do not provide due diligence, legal, tax, accounting, valuation, or investment advice. Buyers must conduct their own due diligence, verify information, and seek independent legal and investment advice before proceeding.

Private secondary shares are typically illiquid. Unlike public stocks, there is no active public market, so selling them can be difficult and time-consuming. Sales depend on finding a willing buyer and often require company approval. Investors should be prepared to hold the shares for an extended period, with no guarantee of a future sale. Always assess your need for liquidity before investing.

SetterVC and Setter Capital do not provide due diligence, legal, tax, accounting, valuation, or investment advice. Buyers must conduct their own due diligence, including verifying ownership, transferability, legal structure, company approval, and assessing the company's prospects. SetterVC and Setter Capital do not provide advice on whether an investment is good, what price to pay, or what the best bid or ask is. SetterVC and Setter Capital may share documents in some circumstances, but it does not guarantee their accuracy or completeness. Due diligence is essential. Seek legal and investment advice as needed.

Before buying Zenity shares, a buyer should try to review the share class, price per share, implied valuation, transfer restrictions, ROFR process, company approval rights, seller ownership evidence, recent financing or tender-offer information, available financial information, information rights, resale restrictions, tax considerations, and expected liquidity paths. Not all information may be available for a private company. Buyers should confirm available diligence, process details, and information needs with their own legal, tax, and investment advisers.

SPVs carry risks. Examples include the need to confirm the company allows SPV-based transfers, verify that the SPV truly owns the shares or interests it claims to own, and ensure it has not sold more interests than it holds. Due diligence is essential. Seek legal and investment advice as needed.

Forward contracts carry risks. Examples include the seller refusing to transfer the shares at the future date, even if the seller owns them, the seller going bankrupt with creditors claiming the shares, or the seller committing the same shares to multiple parties. Due diligence is essential. Seek legal and investment advice as needed.

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