Sage at a glance
Sage exists to knock down barriers so everyone can thrive, starting with the millions of small and mid-sized businesses served by them, their partners, and accountants. Customers trust their finance, HR, and payroll software to make work and money flow. By digitizing business processes and relationships with customers, suppliers, employees, banks, and governments, their digital network connects SMBs, removing friction and delivering insights. Knocking down barriers also means Sage use their time, technology, and experience to tackle digital inequality, economic inequality, and the climate crisis.
1981
Founded in 1981
North Tyneside, UK
Headquartered in North Tyneside, UK
23
Global offices
2 million
Global customers
We want everybody at Sage to understand that the culture at Sage is one where everybody is empowered and confident when it comes to security, no matter what role you're working in.
The solution
Better upskilling. Better security. Better business outcomes.
After partnering with Pluralsight to roll out their upskilling program, Sage saw major proficiency improvements. There was a huge drop in the time it took to fix security vulnerabilities, showing that developers wrote fewer new vulnerabilities and had more time to fix old ones.
A new enthusiasm for security immediately became visible in Sage’s engineering culture. The company formed the Security Champion Network, a group of 180 engineering employees—developers, testers, architects, and more—who drive transparency and consistent communication between security and product. These engineers dedicate 3.5 hours a week to helping the security team implement new tooling, raising security issues, and serving as a general point of contact for the organization.Â
Sage leveraged the power of Pluralsight Skills to simplify their notoriously complex tech stack and better secure their org. From vast content libraries that allowed them to upskill on all areas of their tech stack to Skill IQ, which provides data-driven insights on upskilling progress and areas for improvement, Sage team members received learning experiences tailored to the company’s needs and their current proficiency. Leaders derived immense value from Skills’ KPI measurement capabilities, using the platform to accurately measure the impact of upskilling efforts on Sage’s highest-risk products.
The benefits of Pluralsight for Sage
Culture of security
Sage has seen measurable increases in time spent learning about security and receptiveness to security initiatives.
Consistent training
Over 1,300 Sage engineering employees learn new skills weekly and stay accountable to quarterly upskilling goals, with 60% of team members doing more than the recommended courses.
Tighter teamwork
Technical teams can be proactive, rather than reactive, with security, freeing up time for innovation and collaboration.
Faster security fixes
Since partnering with Pluralsight, Sage has seen a staggering 82% reduction in time to address security vulnerabilities.