New Delhi, April 30 -- Cybersecurity firm Seclore has elevated Nilesh Bhojani to the role of Chief Product and Technology Officer (CPTO), tasking the decade-long company veteran with leading its global product and technology organisation at a time of rising enterprise demand for AI-ready data protection.

In his new role, Bhojani will oversee strategy and execution for Seclore's ARMOR Data Security Intelligence platform, including product roadmap, architecture, and engineering. He will also drive the company's push towards cloud-native and AI-ready capabilities, while working closely with customers and go-to-market teams to align the platform with evolving data governance and security requirements.

The move comes as enterprises grapple with securing sensitive data in increasingly AI-driven environments, where usage, access, and compliance risks are becoming more complex.

Bhojani, who brings over two decades of experience across product engineering, enterprise software, and consulting, has played a key role in shaping Seclore's technology evolution. He was instrumental in transitioning the company's cloud services into an automation-led managed services model. Before joining Seclore, he co-founded marketing analytics SaaS firm Markitty and held roles at Neova Solutions and Synygy.

Announcing the elevation, CEO Vishal Gauri said Bhojani has been central to the company's product and engineering milestones over the past decade, adding that his combined engineering depth and customer-centric approach will be critical as AI reshapes how data is created, used, and secured.

Bhojani said his focus will be on building on Seclore's existing enterprise footprint and advancing its platform for a future where AI fundamentally changes data usage-and the need to protect it.

The leadership transition comes amid broader expansion plans for Seclore across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. The company is also stepping up investments in its data security intelligence platform, with a sharper focus on regulated sectors such as banking, financial services, manufacturing, and government, where data sovereignty and compliance remain critical priorities.

Published by HT Digital Content Services with permission from TechCircle.