Asset Manager

Updated:

Resolver Inc.

Resolver's Risk Intelligence platform serves 1,000+ brands, claiming coverage of $6.5T in market cap from Toronto.

Resolver Inc.

Resolver operates as a pure-play enterprise software provider, delivering a unified Risk Intelligence platform from its Toronto headquarters. The firm serves corporate risk, security, and compliance functions, processing data that helps 1,000-plus brands — including DHL, Ninety One, and T-Mobile Netherlands — anticipate and quantify operational threats. Its global footprint spans offices in Toronto, London, Leeds, and Hyderabad, reflecting a delivery model that supports multinational clients across diverse regulatory environments. The platform spans three core modules. The Risk & Audit suite covers enterprise risk management, internal audit, internal controls, third-party risk, business continuity, and IT risk. A separate Enterprise Security & Investigations module handles incident management, enterprise investigations, security risk, command-center operations, threat protection, and persons-of-interest probes. The Compliance module maps multi-jurisdictional obligations — including regulatory, IT, and whistleblowing requirements — into actionable workflows, while an adjacent Brand Equity Protection unit monitors social-media risk and online safety compliance. Confirmed deployments include DHL's German operations, asset manager Ninety One, and T-Mobile Netherlands, which reduced security incidents after adopting Resolver's intelligence layer. Resolver publishes limited team or financial metrics, but its website states that clients average over $8 million in revenue saved per averted crisis and that the platform elevates reporting efficiency by up to 95 percent while cutting unreported events by 30 percent. The company's LinkedIn presence is absent from standard records, suggesting a selectively outbound commercial motion rather than a broad institutional marketing campaign. No adjacent investment vehicles, philanthropic foundations, or co-investment clubs are publicly disclosed. Structurally, Resolver sits outside the family-office or fund-manager taxonomy — it is an operating company whose product embeds a quantifiable view of enterprise risk. That posture means capital allocation is a function of software R&D and sales-scale economics, not LP commitments or deal-by-deal deployment. For allocators, the firm is relevant only as a potential direct portfolio operating asset or a strategic vendor to existing private-equity holdings in regulated industries.

General information

Firm type

Asset Manager

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

North America

Country

Canada

City

Toronto

Corporate office

111 Peter St, Suite 804 Toronto, ON M5V 2H1 Canada

Additional offices

London, United Kingdom · Leeds, United Kingdom · Hyderabad, India

Sector focus

Enterprise SoftwareCybersecurityRegTech

Frequently asked questions

How does Resolver generate its revenue?

Resolver sells software-as-a-service subscriptions to a Risk Intelligence platform that bundles risk, audit, compliance, and security modules. Pricing is not disclosed, but the firm's sales motion targets large enterprises — its website invites prospects to request a personalized demo rather than listing self-service tiers.

What is the relationship between Resolver and the firms it names in case studies?

DHL, Ninety One, and T-Mobile Netherlands are cited as clients that have deployed the platform for incident management, GRC modernization, and physical-security risk reduction. Resolver does not disclose equity relationships or strategic partnerships with these entities.

Does Resolver hold a proprietary data asset that could be monetized separately?

The platform aggregates risk signals across IT, physical security, compliance, and social channels, but Resolver does not market any standalone benchmarking or data-product subscriptions outside its core SaaS modules. The firm's value proposition remains tied to operational software, not a licensable data pool.

How does Resolver approach artificial intelligence within its platform?

The firm's public materials describe contextual analytics that prioritize risks based on business impact, but they stop short of describing a dedicated AI/ML product or structural moat built on proprietary models. The 'intelligence' layer appears to be a combination of workflow automation, risk-scoring heuristics, and integrated reporting.

What governance or ownership disclosures exist for Resolver?

No founding date, principal names, or ownership structure are publicly disclosed on the firm's website or in the captured materials. Resolver appears to operate as a privately held software company without external investor transparency.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

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