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Versa takes aim at fragmented enterprise security with CSPM, orchestration update, and AI agent controls

May 31, 2026  Twila Rosenbaum  3 views
Versa takes aim at fragmented enterprise security with CSPM, orchestration update, and AI agent controls

Traffic patterns are shifting, agent deployments are multiplying, and cloud environments keep expanding. The point tools enterprises use to manage each layer are not keeping pace.

Key updates to the VersaONE platform

Versa Networks is addressing these challenges with three coordinated updates to its VersaONE Universal SASE Platform. The first is a Cloud Security Posture Management (CSPM) capability that brings cloud risk visibility into the same view as access security. The second is a significant update of its Concerto orchestration platform. The third is an AI agent trust and verification framework due later this month.

Research highlights fragmentation crisis

New research backs the strategic rationale. Versa’s inaugural State of SASE + AI Report, a survey of 525 senior IT and security decision-makers at U.S. enterprises, found that 35% of organizations suffered a breach in the past year tied to coordination gaps between networking and security teams. Nearly three quarters (73%) say technical integration complexity has delayed or derailed a critical project. Some 99% have named convergence a strategic priority, yet only 30% have done it.

“AI and digital sovereignty are fundamentally changing what customers have to do and what needs to happen,” Kelly Ahuja, CEO of Versa Networks, said.

Key findings from the report

  • 35% reported a security breach in the past year linked to coordination gaps between networking and security teams
  • 53% report higher operational costs from managing redundant tools
  • 73% say technical integration complexity has delayed or derailed a critical project
  • 99% have named convergence a strategic priority, but only 30% have implemented shared ownership of SASE strategy
  • 95% say AI is forcing networking and security teams to collaborate more closely
  • 58% cite strengthening security posture as the top driver for convergence, compared to 19% who cited lowering total cost of ownership

Organizations running 50 or more vendors are nearly twice as likely to report delayed application rollouts as those with leaner stacks (61% vs. 34%) and more likely to report inconsistent policy enforcement (57% vs. 40%). The report also surfaces a shadow AI problem: more than 80% of organizations say AI is in use somewhere in their environment, yet fewer than 20% said they knew what it was being used for.

Improving orchestration with Concerto update

The complexity findings point directly at an orchestration problem, and Versa says it has been spending significant engineering resources to solve it. “This is where we’ve been spending a lot of engineering cycles on the management and simplifying the complexity, because what we heard from most users is, ‘hey, I’ve got different islands of policy,'” Ahuja said.

Concerto 13.1.1 is the response. The release redesigns the SD-WAN configuration experience and unifies security and authentication profiles across SD-WAN and SSE, collapsing those islands into a single construct. “When you set a policy for a user, whether it’s a site or a cloud, it doesn’t matter where the user is, you actually do it once, and you do it in a consistent way,” he said.

The release also adds hierarchical policy templates, letting organizations define a master policy and extend subsets to different user groups and departments without rebuilding from scratch. The target is enterprise-grade SD-WAN without the staffing overhead that has traditionally come with it. “Getting that scale, supporting that scale, but also simplifying how they kind of configure it is absolutely crucial,” Ahuja said.

Closing the two-portal problem: CSPM joins VersaONE

Policy configuration is one layer of fragmentation. Cloud risk visibility is another. Cloud Security Posture Management (CSPM) continuously monitors cloud infrastructure for misconfigurations, compliance gaps and security risks. Google’s $32 billion acquisition of Wiz earlier this year underscored how contested that space has become. Versa says its CSPM plans predate the deal. “We were listening to customers, looking at what they’re doing, as opposed to seeing what else is out there in the market,” Ahuja said. “It was already on our plans. We were just kind of working our way through it.”

Most enterprises run ZTNA or a secure internet gateway for user and device posture and a separate CSPM tool for cloud configuration risk, managed by separate teams with no shared context. Versa is adding CSPM directly to VersaONE, extending access security into continuous cloud risk visibility across AWS, Azure, GCP and OCI, with telemetry feeding into Concerto alongside access risk data. “While the industry has been talking about unifying risk intelligence for years, everyone still kind of relies on two different portals, one for doing your ZTNA or secure internet, and then second for cloud,” Ahuja said. “And there’s no way to really kind of share that context and really kind of pull it together. This is what we’re actually solving for.”

AI agents are the next enforcement problem

CSPM extends the platform’s visibility into cloud infrastructure. The next challenge is what happens when AI agents start changing that infrastructure. “One single user prompt can actually trigger many agents coming up, and then they can actually start to make changes inside your environment to policies and configuration, and many of them are invisible to the operator,” Ahuja said.

Versa’s response, due around May 21, is a trust and verification framework that applies policy-based access controls to agents the same way they apply to users and devices, functioning as a verification gateway inside the management and orchestration layer. Putting a human in the review path is not a viable answer at this scale. “Putting a human in the loop will only slow things down, because all of a sudden, you’ve got lots of things that you’re trying to do, but somebody has to observe them and do them,” Ahuja said.

For the framework itself, Versa is drawing on what it has already built for user and device access. “We’re looking at all the things that have been done for user and device, sort of secure access from those and seeing which one of those can be applied to agentic stuff as well,” Ahuja said. This approach allows the platform to govern AI agents without requiring a complete new security paradigm, leveraging existing capabilities for identity, policy, and threat detection.

Broader context: The SASE market and enterprise needs

The updates come as the Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) market continues to mature, driven by the need for unified security and networking. Gartner, which coined the term SASE, projects that by 2025, 80% of enterprises will have adopted a SASE or SSE strategy. However, the research from Versa indicates that adoption is still fragmented, with many organizations struggling to integrate separate tools for SD-WAN, cloud security, and remote access.

Versa’s approach of embedding CSPM directly into the SASE platform aims to reduce the number of consoles administrators need to monitor. This is especially important as cloud environments become more complex with multiple providers and hybrid architectures. The addition of AI agent controls also addresses a growing concern: as organizations deploy more AI agents for automation and decision-making, the risk of unintended configuration changes increases. Without proper governance, agents can introduce vulnerabilities or violate compliance policies.

The hierarchical policy templates in Concerto are designed to scale across large enterprises with diverse departments and geographies. By enabling master policies with subset extensions, organizations can maintain consistent security postures while allowing local variations. This reduces the burden on central security teams and accelerates policy deployment.

In summary, Versa's three updates represent a concerted effort to address the fragmentation that plagues enterprise security. By integrating CSPM, simplifying orchestration, and introducing AI agent governance, the company aims to provide a more cohesive platform that can keep pace with the evolving threat landscape and the rapid adoption of AI technologies. The focus on reducing integration complexity and operational costs aligns with the primary drivers identified in the report, such as strengthening security posture (58%) and lowering total cost of ownership (19%). As AI continues to reshape how networking and security teams interact, tools that bridge the gap between visibility and control will become increasingly critical.


Source: Network World News


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