Kaseya Expands VSA, Hiring Plan
Kaseya announced an expansion of its VSA platform with AI-powered threat detection and said it plans to hire 150 cybersecurity engineers by the end of 2026 from its Miami headquarters. (x.com)
Kaseya is adding new artificial-intelligence features to its VSA management platform and says it plans to hire 150 cybersecurity engineers in Miami by the end of 2026. (kaseya.com) VSA is Kaseya’s software for managed service providers and in-house information technology teams to monitor devices, push patches, automate tasks and handle security work from one console. Kaseya said in July 2025 that VSA 10 added a generative artificial-intelligence workflow builder that let technicians describe a task in plain language and raised workflow success rates to more than 96%. (kaseya.com) Kaseya has not publicly posted a full press release matching the hiring announcement on its press archive, but its current careers site says the company is hiring globally and maintains a large Miami presence. Kaseya says it serves more than 50,000 managed service provider and small-business customers around the world. (kaseya.com, kaseya.com) The hiring push lands as Kaseya keeps framing artificial intelligence as both a product feature and a security necessity. In a March 17, 2026 report, the company said 2025 was an “inflection point” for cyberattacks as artificial-intelligence-generated phishing became standard and older warning signs like bad grammar became less reliable. (kaseya.com) That helps explain why threat detection is now moving into tools that were once sold mainly on automation and remote management. Kaseya’s March report said 82% of ransomware attacks target organizations with fewer than 1,000 employees, the same market many managed service providers support. (kaseya.com) Miami is also central to the company’s growth plan. Miami-Dade County said in March 2023 that Kaseya was expanding its headquarters through a $16 million project expected to create 3,400 jobs, with support from the county’s Relocation and Expansion Incentive Program. (areadevelopment.com) Kaseya’s headcount has grown unevenly as it expanded. Channel Futures reported in April 2024 that Kaseya cut about 150 workers at its Miami headquarters, described the move as performance-based terminations rather than layoffs, and said the company planned to backfill those roles. (channelfutures.com) The company has also widened its security stack through acquisitions and product launches. Its press archive shows Kaseya acquired email-security company INKY in October 2025 and announced new artificial-intelligence work in a Silicon Valley research and development hub on April 7, 2026. (kaseya.com) If Kaseya fills 150 cybersecurity engineering jobs in Miami on top of the new VSA features, it would deepen a strategy the company has been building for years: sell one platform that automates information technology work, folds in more security controls and keeps more of that product development in-house. (kaseya.com, kaseya.com)