Full-Time
SSL certificates and automated CLM
No salary listed
Lille, France
Hybrid
At least 3 days per week on-site in Lille.
Sectigo provides digital certificates and automated certificate lifecycle management (CLM) to secure online communications and devices. Its core product is SSL certificates that verify site identities and enable encrypted connections, while CLM automates issuance, renewal, and revocation of certificates across organizations. The company serves enterprises, small businesses, and government bodies with subscription-based security services, plus private PKI and IoT device security to manage identities for humans and machines at scale. Sectigo differentiates itself through its long-standing expertise in digital identity, a comprehensive suite that combines certificate issuance with automated management and IoT security, and a subscription model that ensures ongoing updates and renewals. Its goal is to help customers protect communications and devices by providing reliable, scalable, and automated PKI and certificate-based security across diverse environments.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Scottsdale, Arizona
Founded
1998
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Health Insurance
401(k) Retirement Plan
Remote Work Options
Sectigo has launched Private PQC, a new feature within Sectigo Certificate Manager that enables enterprises to issue and manage private post-quantum cryptography SSL/TLS certificates. The capability allows organisations to test quantum-safe certificates within existing workflows without requiring new infrastructure. The service supports ML-DSA algorithms including ML-DSA-44, ML-DSA-65 and ML-DSA-87, and is hosted by Sectigo with virtual hardware security module backing. Teams can manage PQC certificates alongside standard certificates using familiar policy-based approvals. The launch comes as Google and Cloudflare have accelerated their PQC migration timelines to 2029. Whilst 90% of organisations expect to fund PQC initiatives within 12 months, most face challenges executing across legacy environments. Existing Sectigo Private CA customers can request access through SCM or their Sectigo representative.
Sectigo has launched Sectigo Partner Platform, the industry's first multi-tenant partner platform designed for managed service providers, value-added resellers and distributors to deliver certificate lifecycle management as a managed service. The platform addresses growing demand as SSL/TLS certificate lifespans shorten and post-quantum cryptography approaches. The platform enables each customer to operate in a fully isolated tenant with separate billing, certificate inventories and admin controls, whilst partners manage all clients through a single interface. It integrates with Sectigo Certificate Manager and offers automated validation, issuance and renewal workflows. Recent research shows only 13% of organisations are extremely confident tracking all certificates, creating opportunities for partners to provide CLM services. The platform supports subscription-based licensing and includes private PKI and device certificate capabilities. It is currently available to select channel partners.
Sectigo launches multi-tenant CLM platform at CloudFest. Published March 24, 2026 News summary. Sectigo launches multi-tenant partner platform at CloudFest 2026 to help MSPs automate certificate lifecycle management and turn growing certificate complexity into scalable recurring services. Sectigo uses CloudFest 2026 in Germany this week to launch its Partner Platform, a multi-tenant system aimed at MSPs, MSSPs and VARs struggling with certificate sprawl and shrinking SSL lifecycles. The move targets a growing operational gap as enterprises fail to track certificates, creating outages and new revenue opportunities for partners offering automated certificate lifecycle management services at scale. The timing is not accidental. Certificate lifetimes are shortening, machine identities are proliferating, and post-quantum cryptography is looming on the horizon. Together, these shifts are quietly turning certificate management into one of the more brittle - and overlooked - layers of enterprise infrastructure. Sectigo's pitch is straightforward: what used to be background plumbing is now a business-critical service. And someone needs to manage it. The certificate problem nobody fully owns. For years, SSL/TLS certificates have been treated as a low-level operational concern - important, but rarely strategic. That assumption is breaking down. As enterprises deploy more cloud services, APIs, IoT devices and AI workloads, the number of certificates in use has surged. At the same time, browser vendors and standards bodies have pushed for shorter certificate lifetimes, increasing the frequency of renewals. The result is a growing administrative burden that many organizations are ill-equipped to handle. Sectigo points to research showing only 13% of organizations are highly confident they are tracking all certificates. That figure is telling. It suggests that even large, well-resourced enterprises lack visibility into a core element of their security posture. The consequences are not theoretical. Expired certificates can - and routinely do - trigger service outages, break customer-facing applications and create last-minute firefighting for IT teams. In regulated industries, they can also lead to compliance issues. This is the gap Sectigo is trying to exploit: not by selling certificates themselves, but by positioning lifecycle management as a managed service that partners can package and resell. Turning operational pain into channel revenue. The Sectigo Partner Platform (SPP) is designed to make that model viable at scale. Its core feature is true multi-tenancy - something Sectigo claims is lacking in many competing tools. Instead of forcing partners to manage all customers within a single environment, SPP isolates each customer into its own tenant, complete with separate billing, reporting, certificate inventories and administrative controls. For MSPs and MSSPs juggling multiple clients, that separation is not just convenient - it is often required for compliance and security reasons. More broadly, the platform leans heavily on automation. Certificate issuance, validation and renewal workflows are designed to run with minimal manual intervention. In theory, this reduces the risk of human error while allowing partners to manage larger volumes of certificates without proportional increases in operational overhead. The commercial logic is clear. By automating what has traditionally been a reactive, ticket-driven process, partners can turn certificate management into a predictable, subscription-based service. That is a far more attractive proposition than scrambling to fix outages caused by expired certificates. Still, there is a degree of industry-wide catch-up here. Many vendors are now racing to reframe certificate management as a revenue-generating service, rather than a necessary cost. Sectigo is not alone in this shift, even if it is early to emphasize partner-led delivery. Multi-Tenancy as a differentiator - or table stakes? Sectigo positions SPP's multi-tenant architecture as a key differentiator. That may be true in some segments, particularly where enterprise tools have been repurposed for partner use. However, in a market increasingly defined by platform-based service delivery, multi-tenancy is quickly becoming a baseline expectation rather than a competitive advantage. Partners expect to manage multiple customers efficiently, with clear boundaries between environments. The more interesting question is whether Sectigo can build enough ecosystem momentum around SPP to make it sticky. Channel platforms live or die by adoption. If partners see genuine operational gains - and, crucially, new revenue streams - they will invest. If not, the platform risks becoming another layer of tooling in an already crowded stack. The quantum factor - and the next wave of complexity. Looming over all of this is post-quantum cryptography (PQC). While still in its early stages, the transition to quantum-resistant algorithms is expected to introduce significant complexity into certificate management. Organizations will need to inventory existing cryptographic assets, assess vulnerabilities and eventually replace certificates and keys at scale. That is not a trivial exercise, particularly for large enterprises with sprawling infrastructure. Sectigo is clearly positioning SPP as part of that future. By centralizing visibility and automating lifecycle processes, the company argues that partners can help customers navigate the transition without disruption. That may prove accurate - but it also underscores how much work lies ahead. PQC is not just another feature upgrade; it is a structural shift in how digital trust is established and maintained. A quiet but growing battleground. Certificate lifecycle management is unlikely to grab headlines in the way AI or cloud platforms do. But it is becoming a quietly critical battleground in enterprise security. As digital systems become more automated and interconnected, the number of machine identities - and the certificates that secure them - will continue to grow. Managing that complexity manually is no longer viable. Sectigo's bet is that partners, not enterprises, will take on that responsibility. It is a plausible strategy. Many organizations already rely on MSPs and MSSPs to manage security operations, and certificate management fits naturally into that model. The challenge will be execution. Turning certificate sprawl into a scalable, profitable service requires more than automation. It requires trust - from partners, from customers and from a market that is only just beginning to recognize the scale of the problem. For now, Sectigo has identified a real gap. Whether it can own it remains to be seen. Executive insights FAQ. Why is certificate lifecycle management becoming critical now? Shorter certificate lifetimes, increased machine identities and expanding cloud environments are creating operational complexity that manual processes cannot handle, raising the risk of outages and compliance failures. What problem does Sectigo's Partner Platform aim to solve? It addresses visibility and control gaps by enabling partners to manage certificates across multiple customers with automation, reducing manual effort and preventing service disruptions caused by expired certificates. How does multi-tenancy benefit service providers? It allows partners to isolate customer environments for security and compliance while managing all tenants centrally, improving scalability, operational efficiency and billing transparency across diverse client portfolios. Is certificate management really a revenue opportunity? Yes, as enterprises struggle with complexity, partners can package lifecycle management as a recurring service, turning a reactive operational task into predictable, subscription-based revenue. What role will post-quantum cryptography play? PQC will significantly increase complexity in certificate management, requiring large-scale cryptographic updates and making automated lifecycle management platforms essential for maintaining security and continuity.
G2 names Sectigo a Leader in Certificate Lifecycle Management (CLM) for the third consecutive year; ranked #1 for user satisfaction. Provided by Business Wire Mar 19, 2026, 5:05:00 AM Company also earns new CLM Leader status across India, Asia, and Asia Pacific regions Sectigo, a global leader in automated Certificate Lifecycle Management (CLM) and digital certificates, today announced another record-setting performance in the G2 Spring 2026 Grid Reports. For the 12th consecutive quarter - three straight years - G2 customer reviews have ranked Sectigo as a Leader in both the CLM and SSL/TLS Certificate Tools categories. In the CLM category, Sectigo Certificate Manager (SCM) earned the top user satisfaction score, securing the #1 ranking. Additionally, for the first time, Sectigo has earned placements in G2's CLM Regional Grid Reports in India, Asia and Asia Pacific, with SCM ranking as a clear leader across all three regions. G2 Spring 2026 CLM Grid(R) Report: Sectigo Certificate Manager ranks as the top Leader in Certificate Lifecycle Management, outperforming competitors in customer satisfaction and market presence. Shorter Certificate Lifetimes Increase Renewal Risk and Operational Complexity On March 15, 2026, shorter SSL/TLS certificate lifespans were introduced, cutting certificate validity periods in half. This shift requires IT teams to renew certificates every six months instead of once per year, dramatically increasing certificate renewal risk and exposing the limits of manual certificate processes. The change has instantly doubled renewal volume, magnifying certificate lifecycle complexity and the likelihood of missed renewals and outages as organizations struggle with a rapidly growing certificate inventory. SCM, which continues to top G2 customer feedback rankings, closes critical automation gaps in certificate management and provides a clear path forward. G2 Customer Reviews Confirm Sectigo Certificate Manager as the #1 CLM Customers continue to deliver standout feedback for SCM. Beyond ranking as the undisputed CLM leader since the Winter 2025 Grid Reports, the latest G2 Grid Reports show SCM earning the highest customer satisfaction score in the CLM category at 99%, reflecting consistently positive experiences. This momentum contributes directly to Sectigo receiving 15 total badge honors across the CLM and SSL/TLS Certificate Tools categories: Certificate Lifecycle Management: * Leader, Certificate Lifecycle Management * Momentum Leader, Certificate Lifecycle Management * Regional Leader, India * Regional Leader, Asia * Regional Leader, Asia Pacific * Best Usability * Best Relationship * Best Results SSL/TLS Certificate Tools: * Leader, SSL/TLS * Momentum Leader, SSL/TLS * Mid-Market Leader, SSL/TLS * Regional Leader, Asia * Regional Leader, Asia Pacific * Best Usability * Best Relationship "Being named the Leader in Certificate Lifecycle Management by G2 for three consecutive years is a powerful reflection of the outcomes our customers achieve with Sectigo," said Nick France, CTO at Sectigo. "Shorter certificate lifetimes are here now, compressing renewal cycles and exposing the limits of manual processes. As we see certificate management needs surge globally, our new recognition as a CLM leader across different regions confirms that Sectigo delivers the automation, visibility, and reliability enterprises require globally." Free Webinar Series Helps Teams Navigate Shorter TLS Lifetimes Join Sectigo and industry thought leaders for a free Shorter TLS Webinar Series, every Tuesday. Each session (with accompanying Q&A time) delivers the clarity, tools, and answers teams need to manage shrinking certificate lifespans and rising certificate renewal volumes. The series combines thought leadership, hands-on tutorials, customer perspectives, and live demos to help organizations modernize their CLM and prepare for what's coming next. Upcoming webinars in March: * March 24, 2026 | Your 6-month TLS debrief, registration available HERE * March 31, 2026 | Your 5-step plan, registration available HERE The full webinar series, including April schedule and registration, is available HERE. About Sectigo Sectigo is the most innovative provider of certificate lifecycle management (CLM), delivering comprehensive solutions that secure human and machine identities for the world's largest brands. Sectigo's automated, cloud-native CLM platform issues and manages digital certificates across all certificate authorities (CAs) to simplify and improve security protocols within the enterprise. Sectigo is one of the largest, longest-standing, and most reputable CAs with more than 700,000 customers, six combined active seats in the CA/Browser Forum and ETSI, and two decades of delivering unparalleled digital trust. For more information, visit www.sectigo.com or follow us on LinkedIn. The articles, information, and content displayed on this webpage may include materials prepared and provided by third parties. Such third-party content is offered for informational purposes only and is not endorsed, reviewed, or verified by Morningstar. 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Sectigo, a global leader in automated Certificate Lifecycle Management, has appointed Clint Maddox as President of Global Field Operations. Maddox will oversee the company's worldwide revenue and go-to-market organisation, including sales, marketing and channel operations. The appointment follows a record-breaking year for Sectigo, which achieved over 20% year-on-year ARR growth, acquired Entrust's public certificate business and doubled its enterprise channel business. The company also launched industry firsts including Sectigo PQC Labs and became the first CLM available on the Pax8 Marketplace. Maddox brings nearly 30 years of experience in enterprise software, most recently serving as Chief Revenue Officer at KX. He previously held senior roles at ConnectWise, Broadcom and CA Technologies, where he led global sales and partner strategies.