Ayvens manages 3.4 million vehicles across 42 countries, with over 600,000 of those being electric - making it one of the world's largest fleet operators and, crucially, the operator of the biggest multi-brand EV fleet globally. The attack surface here isn't theoretical: it spans connected vehicle telemetry, customer-facing digital platforms like My Ayvens, subscription billing systems, and the operational technology layer behind fleet management at serious scale. With more than 14,500 employees supporting full-service leasing, flexible subscriptions, and end-to-end fleet logistics, the data environment is broad and high-value - think corporate fleet contracts, private customer PII, real-time vehicle data streams, and cross-border operational systems.
The core business runs on digital platforms that interface with both large international corporates and individual end users, which means the security team is dealing with a dual threat model: protecting enterprise-scale fleet data and securing consumer-grade digital experiences simultaneously. The company's push into sustainable mobility and EV fleet management adds another dimension - charging infrastructure integration, battery telemetry, and energy grid interactions all expand the perimeter. This is a mobility company where cybersecurity isn't a bolt-on; it's load-bearing infrastructure across leasing operations, vehicle lifecycle management, and the subscription economy.