Brad Perriott, SentinelOne's former area vice president and country manager for ANZ, has joined Australian AI platform company monō ai as head of GTM.
"For someone who always wanted to build something, joining a company that’s building in exactly the right way feels like a good place to land," Perriott said in a post on LinkedIn.
"A genuine thank you to David Hyman and Daniel Folb for the opportunity."
Monō, launched earlier this month, embeds compounding intelligence directly into how organisations operate, aiming to replace traditional advisory models with a technology platform that scales.
Capabilities developed for one deployment remain within the platform, compound over time, and can be extended across teams, processes, and business units.
Each engagement begins with a fixed‑scope, two‑to‑six‑week proof‑of‑value deployment focused on a single high‑impact process. Once results are demonstrated, the platform is expanded incrementally to support broader workflows, progressing toward an enterprise‑wide AI operating system.
Client data remains within each organisation’s own cloud environment under strict access controls and the platform operates on an inference‑only model, ensuring external AI providers do not train on or retain client data.
The company was founded by David Hyman, co-founder of Lendi Group, along with Daniel Folb (ex-Deloitte), Shoumo Thakurta (ex-CBA), Olivia Braddick (ex-EY), and Emilio Mattiuzzo (ex-Valiant), with a broader team drawn from Salesforce, Accenture, Telstra, and American Express.
Monō has taken no venture capital or institutional investment – it is backed entirely by Hyman, fellow Lendi Group co-founder Sebastian Watkins, and Archistar Chairman Prabhat Sethi.
Atturra was revealed as a founding partner of the company, with the companies helping clients to determine what should remain human, what should become AI augmented, and what should be fully automated.
“The partnership creates a practical pathway to move beyond pilot activity and redesign work in a way that is commercially meaningful, operationally realistic, and properly governed,” said Atturra CEO Stephen Kowal.
“Our clients can use the partnership to identify where human effort is being consumed by low-value motion, where AI can remove friction, and where entirely new operating patterns are possible.”
Jason Duerden took over Perriott's former role in March.




