Myriad360 Adds Advizex as AI Work Gets Harder to Run

Myriad360 acquires Advizex to form $900M enterprise infrastructure and AI services platform, expanding managed services and hybrid capabilities.

Feb 25, 2026
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Myriad360 just announced the acquisition of Advizex Technologies, forming a larger combined company across enterprise infrastructure, AI platforms, and managed services. Together, the two companies represent more than $900 million in annual run-rate gross revenue.

Companies share mutual focus on enterprise but with complementary technical expertise

Both companies have been working on many of the same enterprise problems over the years, just from different angles. Myriad360 has spent a lot of time on the infrastructure side, handling integration, networking, data centers, and the prep work that’s needed to run AI workloads reliably.

Advizex approaches it from an operational perspective. The company brings a wealth of experience in hybrid infrastructure, data platforms, AI tools, and managed services, plus enterprise relationships in markets where Myriad360 hasn’t had as much reach. 

One is strong on building and wiring things up. The other is strong on keeping them running and evolving.

With AI and enterprise systems nowadays, infrastructure, data, and operations are smashed together into a single, connected problem. Companies that can handle more of that stack make life easier for customers.

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Building a bigger platform, not a clean break

Executives from both companies emphasized continuity over reinvention. Advizex will operate as Advizex, a Myriad360 company, as the organizations work through integration planning with a stated focus on stability, revenue growth, and existing client relationships.

“This is about building a platform positioned for where the market is going,” said Jay Miley, CEO, Myriad360. “Our priority is continuity for clients and expanded opportunities for our teams. People buy from people they know and trust, and that remains unchanged. What expands is the capability, scale, and reach behind those relationships. Together, we are positioned to serve clients across the AI and enterprise infrastructure spectrum, from foundation to activation to ongoing operations.”

AI work tends to spill across infrastructure, data, and operations, and most teams simply don’t want to coordinate a bunch of different vendors to make it all work.

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Why Advizex fits in

Advizex brings an enterprise-grade managed services operation and experience delivering infrastructure-as-a-service through platforms such as Dell APEX and HPE GreenLake. 

That complements Myriad360’s strength in networking, accelerated compute environments, and large-scale deployments.

From Advizex’s side, the emphasis is on expanding delivery without resetting the relationship model. 

“Advizex has built long-standing client relationships grounded in trust, accountability, and performance,” said C.R. Howdyshell, CEO, Advizex Technologies. 

“Joining Myriad360 expands what we can deliver while preserving who we are. Our clients will continue working with the same trusted leaders and engineers, now supported by a broader platform.”

The companies say that client ownership and go-to-market execution are expected to stay consistent in 2026.

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Scale keeps creeping into infrastructure deals

The deal points to how enterprises are buying infrastructure right now. As systems get more complicated, bigger platforms with broader coverage are easier to work with–at least in theory.

AI really speeds up that shift, but the ask seems pretty simple. Build it, keep it running, and support it long term, without forcing customers to rip and replace.

Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

Zero Networks recently announced a fully channel-first strategy, expanding its partner ecosystem to make it easier for MSPs and integrators to sell and support identity-focused security. It’s another example of vendors leaning on partners to deliver and run increasingly complex infrastructure and security environments end-to-end.

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Allison Francis

Allison is a contributing writer for Channel Insider, specializing in news for IT service providers. She has crafted diverse marketing, public relations, and online content for top B2B and B2C organizations through various roles. Allison has extensive experience with small to midsized B2B and channel companies, focusing on brand-building, content and education strategy, and community engagement. With over a decade in the industry, she brings deep insights and expertise to her work. In her personal life, Allison enjoys hiking, photography, and traveling to the far-flung places of the world.

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