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KOBAN SÜDVERS becomes CyberCube’s first broker client in Austria

KOBAN SÜDVERS became CyberCube’s first broker client in Austria, taking Broking Manager and Prep Module into a brokerage with 11 offices and €630 million in premium volume.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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KOBAN SÜDVERS becomes CyberCube’s first broker client in Austria
Source: cybcube.com

KOBAN SÜDVERS has become CyberCube’s first broker client in Austria, licensing Broking Manager and Prep Module as it expands its cyber insurance and advisory services. The move is more than a local account win. It pushes cyber analytics deeper into the broker workflow, where exposure mapping, client prep and placement support are starting to look as important as the actual sale of coverage.

CyberCube announced the deal on June 8, 2026 and positioned KOBAN SÜDVERS as an innovative, fast-growing broker and advisor with 11 offices across Austria and membership in the Worldwide Broker Network. KOBAN SÜDVERS says it manages €630 million in premium volume across 20 locations in Austria, Germany and Switzerland, and another profile says the group has nine branch offices in Austria and nine in Germany, plus operations in Switzerland and worldwide through WBN. That is a serious footprint, and it explains why this first Austrian broker client matters.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Broking Manager is CyberCube’s broker-facing analytics platform. CyberCube says it is built to help brokers quantify exposure, estimate financial losses and inform cyber insurance purchasing decisions. Prep Module is an add-on intended to help brokers prepare clients for the cyber placement process. Put together, the tools give KOBAN SÜDVERS a way to translate technical cyber risk into financial language that clients can use when deciding what to buy, where they are exposed and what kind of controls or improvements may be needed before renewal.

The deal also extends CyberCube’s reach in the DACH region, where cyber insurance and risk modeling have been gaining ground. That market is active enough to make broker-facing analytics useful, not decorative. A 2025 DACH cyber insurance report put broker-client penetration in the region at 54 percent, above the global figure of 47 percent, which helps explain why software that supports advisory conversations is finding an audience there.

CyberCube itself has been building toward this kind of broker distribution for years. The company was established in 2015 inside Symantec and has operated independently since 2018. A 2025 investor note said it served more than 130 clients across the cyber (re)insurance value chain and beyond, while a 2024 note said it had already passed 100 clients and employed more than 120 people worldwide. CyberCube’s February 2026 partnership with United Insurance Brokers pointed in the same direction: brokers are no longer just placing cyber cover, they are using software to shape the conversation around risk.

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