StackAware and Armilla AI: advancing AI insurance
Risk transfer is key to comprehensive AI governance.
Risk transfer is key to comprehensive AI governance.
So I’m excited to partner with Armilla AI on AI insurance.
Together, we’re helping firms:
Avoid unacceptable AI risk
Mitigate what’s left with controls
Accept risk when it makes business sense
Transfer residual AI risk with purpose-built insurance
How the partnership works:
1. StackAware helps companies implement ISO/IEC 42001-aligned AI governance programs.
2. Armilla AI evaluates real-world system performance and failure modes to support underwriting.
3. Organizations demonstrating maturity unlock AI liability insurance on favorable terms.
This closes a major gap in the market.
Most companies today can talk about responsible AI.
Few can prove it in a way insurers, regulators, and enterprise customers accept.
By connecting ISO 42001 readiness with Armilla’s AI liability coverage, governance stops being a cost center and starts becoming a risk-financing lever.
Philip Dawson, Head of Partnerships at Armilla AI, said:
“Underwriting only works when you understand how systems behave in the real world. Partnering with StackAware allows us to translate strong AI governance into measurable risk signals—helping organizations both reduce loss exposure and transfer what remains.”
StackAware clients now have a clearer path to:
Govern AI responsibly
Validate it technically
Insure it intelligently
If you’re deploying AI agents, models, or decision-support systems—and wondering how governance, testing, and insurance fit together—this is the link.
Want to learn more about how Armilla and StackAware are revolutionizing AI risk management?



Sharp move linking ISO 42001 compliance directly to underwriting. The progression from governance to technical validation to insurability makes strategic sence, especially since most orgs struggle to translate AI governance into business value. From my experience auditing risk frameworks, the gap between "having a policy" and "proving performance" is where most fail. Armilla's real-world failure mode analysis could actualy bridge that, turning compliance from overhead into leverage for better premiums.