Gadget

Sophos comes to SA

Global cybersecurity leader Sophos has established a local office in South Africa, highlighting the growing demand for cybersecurity service in this country.

Sophos South Africa (Pty) Ltd is described as “a local legal entity designed to strengthen Sophos’ operations in South Africa and support the company’s continued growth across sub-Saharan Africa”. The office is situated at Mushroom Farm Retail Centre in Midrand.

Sophos says that local organisations are facing a more complex threat landscape driven by ransomware, identity-based attacks, AI-assisted threats, skills shortages and growing pressure to demonstrate cyber resilience. As businesses across the region accelerate cloud adoption, hybrid work models and the use of AI, the need for trusted, measurable and locally supported cybersecurity outcomes has become more urgent.

“South Africa is a strategically important market for Sophos, both in its own right and as a gateway into the wider African region,” said Andy Travers, SVP for EMEA sales at Sophos. “Establishing a local entity means our customers get faster, locally aligned support and simpler procurement. For our partners, it means local invoicing, streamlined vendor registration and compliance alignment that make it easier to transact and grow with Sophos. This is the foundation for our long-term growth in the region.”

Beyond day-to-day operations, says the company, the new entity creates a stronger platform for Sophos to invest in local hiring, expand its in-region capabilities and deepen engagement with the South African cybersecurity community over time. 

Travers said that the move aligns with Sophos’ broader focus on AI-powered security innovation and trust.  

“AI is reshaping both attack and defence, but technology alone is not enough. Our recent cybersecurity trust research shows that organisations are looking for partners they can rely on, not just vendors with tools. Sophos is combining AI, automation, threat intelligence and expert-led services to help organisations improve resilience and make better security decisions with greater confidence.”

Recent Sophos research highlights the urgency of this need. Sophos’ State of Identity Security 2026 report, a vendor-agnostic survey of 5,000 IT and cybersecurity leaders across 17 countries, including South Africa, found that 71% of organisations globally suffered at least one identity-related breach in the past year. In South Africa, the reported breach rate was even higher, at 75.0%.

“South African organisations are operating in a cyber environment where attackers are moving faster, exploiting identity weaknesses, abusing legitimate credentials and taking advantage of gaps in visibility,” said Travers. “At the same time, many local businesses are under pressure to modernise, digitise and adopt AI responsibly, often with limited internal security capacity. This makes South Africa an important and dynamic market for Sophos, and one where local presence matters.”

Sophos defends organisations with Sophos Central, the industry’s first AI-native Cybersecurity Defence System. it brings together endpoint, firewall, identity, SIEM, network, email, cloud, threat intelligence, XDR and MDR in a unified context lake with integrated AI and a single workflow, delivered through a global partner ecosystem and informed by frontline expertise from Sophos X-Ops. 

It promises to allow organisations to move from tactical dashboard management to operational confidence, allowing them to identify and remediate risk at machine speed across their attack surface, increase the impact of their cybersecurity and IT investments, strengthen their compliance and cyber insurance posture, and build a cybersecurity strategy that is better aligned to business needs.

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