Why every AI startup needs a security page on its website
In-depth analyses of real-world cyber incidents and emerging threat trends, authored exclusively by our analysts.
By the time an enterprise buyer sends you a security questionnaire, the clock is already against you. You have days to answer questions that take weeks to prepare for, and the deal stalls while their security team works through your responses. There is a way to get ahead of all of this, and a growing number of vendors are using it. It is called a trust centre.
This article explains what a trust centre is, why it shortens enterprise deals, what to put in one, and how to think about building it as an AI startup.
What a trust centre actually is
A trust centre is a dedicated page on your website where you publish your security posture in one place. It sets out your certifications, your policies, how you handle data, and the controls you have in place, so that a prospective buyer can find the answers themselves rather than waiting for you to fill in a questionnaire.
Think of it as the public, self serve version of your security documentation. Instead of every buyer sending you the same forty seven questions and you answering them one deal at a time, you answer them once, properly, and point everyone to the same place.
For an AI product this matters even more, because buyers now have AI specific concerns that did not exist a couple of years ago. A trust centre lets you address those concerns directly, on your own terms, before they become a back and forth over email.
Why it shortens enterprise deals
The value of a trust centre comes down to time, and time is what kills deals. The longer a security review drags on, the more chance there is for momentum to fade, priorities to shift, or a competitor to move faster.
Enterprise security teams are stretched. They are reviewing a large and growing number of vendors every year, and each thorough review takes many hours of work. Anything you can do to reduce that effort makes you easier to approve.
The third-party risk buyers worry about
That figure is exactly why buyers scrutinise vendors so closely. When they bring you in, they inherit your risk, and a trust centre is your chance to show them that risk is well managed before they have to ask.
- It removes the wait. Buyers can read your security posture the moment they are interested, rather than waiting for a questionnaire cycle.
- It answers questions before they are asked. A good trust centre pre empts most of the standard questionnaire, so there is less to send back and forth.
- It signals maturity. A vendor with a clear, well organised trust centre looks like one that takes security seriously, which lowers the buyer's perceived risk immediately.
- It scales. You do the work once, and every future buyer benefits, instead of you answering the same questions deal after deal.
What to put in a trust centre
A trust centre should be honest and useful rather than exhaustive. The goal is to answer the questions a buyer's security team actually asks, in plain terms. The core sections most trust centres include are these.
- Certifications and standards. Whatever you hold or are working towards, such as ISO 27001, SOC 2, ISO 42001, or Cyber Essentials, with honest detail about your status.
- Data handling. How you process, store, and protect personal data, where it is hosted, and how you handle data subject requests under GDPR.
- AI specific practices. Which model providers you use, whether data is used to train them, what Data Processing Agreements you have in place, and how you defend against risks like prompt injection.
- Security controls. Your approach to access control, encryption, logging, and monitoring, described clearly enough for a security professional to assess.
- Policies. Your information security policy, access control policy, and incident response plan, available on request or to download.
- Penetration testing. Confirmation that you test your product and that findings are remediated, with reports available under a non disclosure agreement.
You do not need every item in place to start. An honest trust centre that shows what you have and what is on your roadmap is far more valuable than an empty one, or none at all.
Honesty matters more than completeness
It is worth being direct about this, because it is where trust is won or lost. A trust centre is not a marketing page where you claim to have everything. Security teams read these documents critically, and an inflated claim that falls apart under questioning does more damage than an honest gap.
If you do not yet hold a certification, say so, and explain your plan and timeline. If a control is partially in place, describe it accurately. Security professionals respect a vendor who is straight with them far more than one who overstates their position. The trust centre works precisely because it is credible, and credibility comes from honesty.
How to approach building one
The good news is that building a trust centre is mostly a matter of documenting work you should be doing anyway. If you have a clear picture of your data flows, your controls, and your certifications status, much of the content already exists in some form.
A sensible approach is to start by gathering what you already have, identifying the gaps against the standard questionnaire, and writing each section honestly. The act of doing this often surfaces weaknesses you can then fix, which improves both your security and your answers at the same time.
The harder part, for most AI startups, is making sure the underlying security genuinely supports what the trust centre says. A trust centre is only as good as the controls behind it. This is where it helps to have the security properly assessed first, so that what you publish is accurate and defensible when a buyer probes it.
The bottom line
A trust centre turns your security from a reactive scramble into a standing asset. Instead of answering the same questions under deadline pressure for every deal, you set out your posture once, honestly, and let buyers come to it. It shortens reviews, signals maturity, and removes one of the most common reasons enterprise deals stall.
As with everything in enterprise security, the value comes from doing it before you need it. Build the trust centre while the pipeline is quiet, back it with real controls, and the next time a buyer wants to know whether they can trust you with their data, the answer is already waiting for them.
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