Brivo and Eagle Eye Networks Merge

AUSTIN, Texas and BETHESDA, Md.– Global cloud-native access control and smart space technologies provider Brivo and global cloud artificial intelligence video surveillance company Eagle Eye Networks will merge, creating a global AI cloud-native physical security operation.

The merged company will operate under the Brivo name and “deliver a truly unified cloud-native security platform,” according to the joint announcement.

“Customers will have one support team, one business relationship and one integrated cloud-native physical security solution,” says Dean Drako, the founder of Eagle Eye Networks, who will become CEO of Brivo following the acquisition, in the joint announcement. “The Brivo Security Suite brings AI, access control, video intelligence, visitor management and intrusion into a single solution, centralizing security across the enterprise.”

Why Did Brivo and Eagle Eye Networks Merge?

“The merger cements our leadership position in the market, provides a better solution for our customers and helps resellers grow their businesses more efficiently,” says Brivo founder Steve Van Till, who becomes president of the company as part of the merger. “We have shared the same vision and ownership for a decade, so the merger is about aligning operations so we can move faster and provide better service to our customers.”

The merged company “will maintain its commitment to an open platform and will continue to support other video and access control solutions,” according to the joint announcement. It has U.S. headquarters in Bethesda, Maryland and Austin, Texas, and additional offices in Lehi, Utah, Amsterdam, Bangalore and Tokyo.

The post Brivo and Eagle Eye Networks Merge appeared first on Security Sales & Integration.



from Security Sales & Integration https://www.securitysales.com/news/brivo-eagle-eye-networks-merge/616066/
via CCTV

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Future of Dental and Medical Practices CCTV in 2026 - UK trends and technology

The 8K Resolution Era: Why Forensic CCTV is Now the Residential Standard

Why Weapons Detection Systems Fail Without Proper Planning