When I look back at how Infovette came to be, it all started long before we ever incorporated. My co‑founder and I both served in the U.S. Army Special Forces. We spent years tracking networks, mapping relationships, and understanding how identity, behavior, and data connect. That experience shaped everything that would become Infovette’s mission: to help secure the nation by building smarter, faster, and more transparent vetting systems.
The challenge: outdated systems and fragmented data
The government’s security‑clearance process is one of the most important pillars of national security. Yet for years, it’s been hampered by outdated workflows, siloed data, and manual review. Agencies were limited to periodic credit checks and static background reports—point‑in‑time snapshots that couldn’t keep pace with today’s dynamic risks.
Our team saw a different path. We wanted to build a system that continuously monitors and alerts on relevant changes across credit data, public records, and publicly available electronic information—all while respecting privacy and compliance requirements. That’s how Infovette’s platform was born.
Automation with accountability
The solution was designed as an intelligence platform for vetting and monitoring. It aggregates credit information, public‑record data, and compliant open‑source signals into a single, intuitive interface. We also mapped our analytics to the 13 adjudicative guidelines the government uses to assess clearance suitability, creating clear, actionable flags that reduce manual effort and human error.
The goal was simple: make it faster and safer for agencies to know who’s who, and identify risk before it becomes a problem.
Why joining Array made sense
When we connected with Array, it was clear they understood our mission. Array’s platform already powers secure credit, identity, privacy and more solutions for leading financial services providers. By joining forces, we could combine our public‑sector expertise with Array’s scale, infrastructure, and data integrations.
Together, we’re extending Array’s reach into the federal, state, and local government space—and strengthening Infovette’s ability to serve the nation’s Trusted Workforce 2.0 initiatives. From continuous vetting to credentialing and suitability checks, our joint capabilities mean agencies and contractors can monitor risk holistically across credit, public records, and open‑source information.
What this means going forward
For existing Infovette customers, nothing changes overnight. Our contracts, teams, and relationships remain intact. What does change is the potential: faster product innovation, deeper integrations, and broader support from Array’s engineering and compliance teams.
For agencies and contractors, it means greater access to the tools needed to modernize clearance and vetting workflows—with the same reliability and compliance standards they expect.
Most importantly, it means continuing the mission Jim and I started more than a decade ago: supporting those who serve our nation by providing the data, technology, and insight they need to make confident decisions.
If your government agency or organization is exploring new approaches to vetting, monitoring, or identity assurance, we’d love to connect.
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Editorial Note: This content is the author’s opinion, expression, and/or recommendation(s).