Ahmedabad-based cybersecurity startup Satark AI has secured an undisclosed pre-seed investment through convertible notes at a $4 million valuation cap from angel investors, the company said. This follows an October funding round last year—also in convertible note format—at a $3 million valuation cap from Infynno Solutions, terms of which were not disclosed.
Funding to Validate Enterprise Pilots
According to a company press release, the fresh capital will be deployed to run structured pilots with enterprise-grade and growth-stage customers. Satark AI said these pilots are designed to validate the platform’s impact on security operations and to inform executive-level decision-making by demonstrating measurable reductions in risk and operational noise.
Product and Capabilities
Founded by Rutvij Vora, Hitaishu Vora and Kiavashin Sethna in June 2005, Satark AI describes itself as a decision-intelligence platform that helps enterprises mitigate cyber risk by consolidating and contextualising security signals. The startup claims its solution integrates with an organisation’s existing security stack—including SIEM, XDR, EDR, IAM, WAF, SOAR and CSSPM—to reduce alert noise by roughly 70 percent.
Satark AI says it can compress more than 10,000 fragmented alerts into five to ten context-driven, business-focused risk decisions, delivering actionable insights across roles: prioritisation for security analysts, real-time risk visibility for CISOs, remediation guidance for developers and business-impact intelligence for senior leadership.
Company Vision
Co-founder and CEO Rutvij Vora said the market is crowded with tools but lacks intelligence that links technical signals to business risk. “What enterprises lack is intelligence that connects the dots and speaks directly to business risk. That is what Satark AI does and we are building it from India for the world,” he said.
By emphasising contextual risk and role-specific outputs, the company aims to improve security decision-making across organisations, helping teams prioritise responses, allocate budgets and communicate risk to board-level stakeholders more effectively.











