UK-based professional services provider Aon is collaborating with SecurityScorecard to extend the range of cyber risk services available to its clients.
Under the arrangement, SecurityScorecard’s outside-in risk management tools will be made available alongside Aon’s CyQu platform, which the broker says provides actionable data to support decision-making.
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The combined package is designed to help organisations pinpoint publicly exposed domains and possible weaknesses, aiding preparation for cyber underwriting and supporting more data-driven assessments in the risk-transfer market.
Aon cyber solutions global head Brent Rieth said: “By combining SecurityScorecard’s external findings with the insights from CyQu and our consulting team, we are deepening visibility into clients’ cyber risk posture, giving them the insights needed to make informed decisions in a dynamic insurance marketplace.”
Aon cited its 2025 Global Risk Management Survey, which found that cyber threats remain the top present and future concern for executives.
It also noted that increased scrutiny from boards, regulators and shareholders is driving demand for stronger visibility and resilience planning.
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By GlobalDataThe company said its Cyber Solutions unit supports clients through proprietary platforms such as CyQu and the Cyber Risk Analyzer, together with its CyQu consulting team.
Bringing these tools together with practitioner expertise is intended to give oragnisations a broader base for managing, mitigating and transferring cyber exposures.
The partnership forms part of Aon’s broader push to strengthen cyber risk evaluation and underwriting support worldwide.
SecurityScorecard chief revenue officer Peter Jantzen added: “By collaborating with Aon, we are helping organisations move from point-in-time assessments to a more continuous, data-driven view of exposure that supports smarter risk and insurance decisions.”
The announcement follows a strong quarterly performance from the broker.
Earlier this week, it reported net income attributable to shareholders of $1.7bn (£1.25bn) for the fourth quarter of 2025, up 136% from $716m a year earlier.
Diluted earnings per share rose to $7.82 from $3.28 in the same period of 2024, while operating income increased 11% to $1.2bn.
Last month, Aon also expanded its proprietary Data Centre Lifecycle Insurance Programme by $1bn, lifting total capacity to $2.5bn.
The move came as investment accelerates in cloud computing, AI and digital infrastructure, alongside the growing scale and capital intensity of modern data centre projects.
