Fig Security Raises $38M in Seed and Series A Funding to Fix Broken SecOps Security Flows
Fig Security came out of the shadows kicking the door open with $38M and a pointed message for the security world. Change is constant. Security stacks break quietly. And most teams do not realize it until the damage is already done. That tension is where Fig Security lives.
Congratulations to Gal Shafir, Co-Founder & CEO, Roy Haimof, Co-Founder & CTO, and Nir Loya Dahan, Co-Founder & CPO for bringing this one to life. Anyone who has spent time inside a modern SOC knows the uncomfortable truth. Security tools multiply. Pipelines shift. Alerts reroute. One configuration tweak here, one infrastructure update there, and suddenly your detection logic is working about as well as a smoke alarm with the batteries half hanging out.
Fig Security built a platform designed to keep security operations standing even while the ground keeps moving. Their system maps detection and response flows across the entire stack, watches for drift, flags when something quietly snaps, and helps teams repair it before attackers stroll through the gap like they own the place. It is less about adding another tool and more about making sure the tools you already trust are actually doing the job.
That idea clearly landed with investors who know this battlefield well. Team8 and Ten Eleven Ventures stepped in to lead the round, bringing deep cybersecurity conviction and serious operator DNA. The angel roster reads like a backstage pass to some of the sharpest security minds around. René Bonvanie. Doug Merritt. Shai Morag. Varun Badhwar. Founders behind Siemplify, Demisto, Noname, Dig, Gem, Avalor, and Epsagon. When people who have built and exited security companies line up like this, they are not buying lottery tickets. They see a structural problem worth solving.
There is a quiet lesson in this raise that founders should pay attention to. Fig Security did not chase noise. They focused on a problem every enterprise security team feels but struggles to articulate. Security operations break not because people are careless but because systems evolve faster than visibility. Solve that tension and the market tends to lean forward.
The team is already working with large enterprises and Fortune 100 organizations, which tells you something about how real the problem is. Security leaders are not looking for another dashboard. They want reliability. They want confidence that the alerts firing at 3:17 in the morning actually mean something.









