DigiCert, Inc.
DigiCert, Inc. is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at DigiCert, Inc..
DigiCert, Inc. is a company.
Key people at DigiCert, Inc..
Key people at DigiCert, Inc..
DigiCert, Inc. is the world's leading provider of scalable TLS/SSL, IoT, and PKI solutions for identity and encryption, securing over 28 billion web connections daily and serving more than 80% of the Fortune 500 across 180+ countries.[2][3][4] Headquartered in Lehi, Utah, with 1,600+ employees globally, the company offers the DigiCert ONE platform for centralized management of public and private trust needs, including websites, software, devices, and enterprise access, while emphasizing enterprise-grade certificate tools, 24/7 multilingual support, and innovation in standards like post-quantum cryptography.[2][3][4] It solves critical digital security challenges by reducing business disruption risks, securing attack surfaces, and enabling agile online engagement for enterprises, IoT, cloud, and DevOps environments.[2][4]
DigiCert was founded in 2003 by Ken Bretschneider in Lehi, Utah, out of frustration with the painful, jargon-heavy process of obtaining SSL certificates, aiming to make digital security simple and user-focused.[1][5][6] Bretschneider sold the company in 2012, transitioning to executive chairman as Nicholas Hales became CEO; John Merrill later served as CEO from 2016 to 2022, followed by current CEO Dr. Amit Sinha.[1][4] Key milestones include joining the CA/Browser Forum in 2005, partnering with Microsoft in 2007 for multi-domain (SAN) certificates, acquiring CyberTrust from Verizon in 2015, and a major 2017 acquisition of Symantec's website security business that quadrupled its size from 300 to 1,500 employees.[1][6][7] Further growth came via 2019 investments from Clearlake Capital and TA Associates, plus acquisitions like Mocana (IoT security, 2022) and DNS Made Easy (2022).[1]
DigiCert rides the explosive growth of digital trust amid rising cyber threats, IoT proliferation (e.g., drones, 5G healthcare), cloud/DevOps shifts, and post-quantum risks, where traditional encryption faces obsolescence.[1][2][3] Timing aligns with regulatory demands for robust PKI/TLS standards and the need for scalable solutions securing billions of daily connections, as browsers and enterprises phase out weak certificates.[1][8] Market forces like increasing attack surfaces and standards evolution (e.g., CA/Browser Forum baselines) favor DigiCert's incumbency, with acquisitions expanding from SSL to comprehensive ecosystems including DNS and IoT.[1][7] It influences the ecosystem by shaping global policies via chaired working groups, partnering with Microsoft/Verizon, and enabling secure innovation in finance, health records, and emerging tech.[3][8]
DigiCert is poised for sustained leadership by consolidating acquisitions into DigiCert ONE, expanding post-quantum tools, and deepening IoT/5G integrations amid quantum threats and zero-trust mandates.[1][2][7] Trends like AI-driven attacks, regulatory tightening (e.g., BIMI/VMC adoption), and edge computing will amplify demand for its automated, high-uptime PKI, potentially driving further M&A and global expansion.[3][8] Its influence may evolve toward dominating machine identities and quantum-safe standards, reinforcing its role as the backbone of secure digital transactions worldwide—proving that simplifying SSL was just the start of building unbreakable online trust.[2][6]