Startups
Cybersecurity / Funding / Investing

Baltimore’s ABS Capital Partners leads $23M Series A for Florida cybersecurity company

With the Inner Harbor firm's investment, ABS venture partner Michael Avon will join the board of deepwatch.

A look down East Pratt Street along Baltimore's Inner Harbor. (Photo by Stephen Babcock)

Inner Harbor-based investment firm ABS Capital Partners led a $23 million Series A for cybersecurity company deepwatch, the company said Wednesday.

deepwatch, a four-year-old company based in St. Petersburg, Fla., provides managed security services, meaning businesses work with the company to run security operations. Businesses often look to these firms in lieu of standing up an in-house cybersecurity team.

The funds will allow deepwatch to accelerate R&D on its security analytics platform, as well as outreach to customers.

With the deal, ABS Capital Partners Venture Partner Michael Avon will join the deepwatch board.

“deepwatch has developed an innovative security operations platform as evidenced by its very impressive growth and momentum,” Avon, the former CFO of Millennial Media who also founded ICX Media, said in a statement. “We look forward to partnering with deepwatch as it continues to disrupt and redefine the modern managed security services industry to help its customers protect their brands and critical assets against a continuously advancing threat landscape.”

ABS Capital Partners typically invests in later-stage growth companies.

Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

Baltimore daily roundup: Film fest spotlights cinema's immersive frontier; over $1M for a wellness startup; $2B to rebuild the Key Bridge

Baltimore daily roundup: Key takeaways on the local tech ecosystem; a video editor's path to working with Keke Palmer; BCIT's new podcast

Baltimore daily roundup: 20 people building Baltimore's innovation community; a local startup's $15K win; the USMC's new tech office

Baltimore daily roundup: HR's big AI-influenced shift; EDA Tech Hubs lessons; DCHD's $2.25M in grants

Technically Media