There appears to be a Frost Radar for everything…including non-person entities, or NPEs (a/k/a non-human identities, or NHIs).
And Descope is talking about the NHI Frost Radar.
“Los Altos, CA, November 13, 2025 – Descope, the drag & drop external IAM platform, today announced that it has been recognized as a Leader in the 2025 Frost Radar™ for Non-Human Identity (NHI) Solutions, further validating Descope’s fast growth and innovation in the agentic identity space.”
The product that Frost & Sullivan recognized is Decsope’s Agentic Identity Hub…
“…an industry-first platform that helps organizations solve authentication and authorization challenges for AI agents, systems, and workflows. Notable additions include providing apps an easy way to become agent-ready while requiring user consent, providing agents a scalable way to connect with 50+ third-party tools and enterprise systems, and helping developers using the Model Context Protocol (MCP) protect their remote MCP servers with purpose-built authorization APIs and SDKs.”
So how does the Frost Radar work?
“The Frost Radar™ is a robust analytical tool that allows us to evaluate companies across two key indices: their focus on continuous innovation and their ability to translate their innovations into consistent growth.”
It uses four classifications.
| Frost classification | What it means | What it REALLY means |
| Growth and Innovation Leaders | High innovation (Y axis) and growth (X axis) | Good |
| Innovation Leaders | High innovation | Stagnant growth |
| Growth Leaders | High growth | Stagnant innovation |
| Challengers | Low growth and innovation | Stagnant everything |
So a “Leader” could lead in some things, but not in others.
Even Descope’s announcement includes a Frost Radar picture that indicates that Descope may be a leader, but others (such as Saviynt and Veza) may be more leaderly.
But I guess it’s better to be some sort of “leader,” or even a “challenger,” then to not be recognized at all.

