Four chairs
at the same table.
The CISO signs the risk, the security team carries the queue, IT owns the stack, developers ship the agents. Agen.co was built so all four win at once.

The CISO
You sign the risk. Now you can see it.
An exec asks how many AI agents run in the company. The honest answer is a shrug with a confidence interval.
The registry says 247, twelve of them found last week, every one with a named owner and a risk score. The board slide writes itself.
A defensible yes to AI adoption: runtime control, per-action evidence, and an accountability chain that survives a regulator.
The security team
Stop reviewing. Start governing.
Every new agent is a review ticket. Every quarter is an attestation campaign. Coverage shrinks as adoption grows.
Policy Builder drafts rules from real traffic, Agent in the Loop triages step-ups, and you decide the five that need judgment.
Machine-speed enforcement with human-grade control, and your weekends back from the quarterly campaign.
IT & platform
One console instead of ten point tools.
An MCP gateway here, a DLP there, an EDR exception list somewhere, and no tool that knows what an agent is.
Connectors, policies, device and browser enforcement, and evidence in one console, on the IdP you already run.
Agentless deployment in a day, 150+ governed connectors, and no migration project between you and governed agents.
Developers
Ship agents. Skip the governance build.
Every agent project reinvents auth, scoping, audit, and an approval flow, badly, under deadline.
Register the agent, get machine identity, scoped short-lived access, step-up flows, and audit for free.
Governance as infrastructure: your agent inherits the platform instead of you building one. External MCP makes your own product agent-ready too.
Bring the whole table.
The best demos have all four chairs filled. Thirty minutes, everyone leaves with their answer.