Vendor profile
Veriforce
Established PlayersVertical specialist for oil & gas and high-hazard industries with substantial scale in those segments.
Veriforce is a vertical specialist with a strong position in oil & gas, energy, and other high-hazard industries. The platform has substantial scale in those verticals and a broader feature set than COI-only platforms, but applicability outside its core verticals is limited.
Strengths
- Deep specialization in oil & gas and high-hazard verticals
- Safety qualification and regulatory compliance integrated alongside COI
- Substantial scale and tenure in target verticals
Weaknesses
- Overkill for buyers outside the core verticals
- Less innovative on architecture than newer entrants
- Vendor experience and modern UX are not investment priorities
Best fit for
- Oil & gas operators
- Energy and high-hazard industrial programs
- Buyers needing safety qualification + COI together
- Programs with deep regulatory compliance overlap (OSHA, PHMSA, etc.)
Less ideal for
- General commercial COI use cases
- Construction GCs without high-hazard exposure
- Property management
- Multi-vertical horizontal programs
Pricing
Not publicly published. Generally enterprise-priced; small-buyer fit is poor.
Integrations
- ·ISNetworld interoperability
- ·Major ERP and procurement systems
- ·Industry-specific regulatory systems
From our research
If you're in oil & gas or high-hazard industries, Veriforce is on the shortlist regardless of what else is on it. If you're not, it's probably the wrong shape of platform — not a worse version of a horizontal COI tracker, just a different category.
In the essays
What COI Tracking Will Look Like in 2030
Predictions for the COI tracking category over the next five years — what changes, what doesn't, and what to plan for.
The Quiet Death of myCOI: What Happened to a Category Pioneer
myCOI was an early pioneer in COI tracking software. Two decades later, the platform is showing its age — and the Illumend rebrand isn't fixing the underlying problems. Here's what's happening.
Endorsements Are Where COI Compliance Lives or Dies
Additional insured, waiver of subrogation, primary and noncontributory — the endorsements behind your COIs are what actually protect you. Here's how to track them.
Manufacturing Vendor Risk: When COI Tracking Meets Global Supply Chain Reality
Global vendor networks, EHS coordination, and contract manufacturer complexity make manufacturing one of the most demanding COI tracking environments. Here's the framework.
Vendor Network Effects: Why Some COI Platforms Onboard Faster Than Others
Network effects in COI tracking are real and underrated. Here's how a platform's existing vendor network affects your implementation speed, vendor friction, and long-term success.
Spreadsheet to Software: The Honest Migration Guide for Small Risk Teams
Moving from spreadsheet-based COI tracking to a real platform is a rite of passage for growing risk teams. Here's an honest guide to doing it well — without the chaos.
The COI Tracker Pricing Models You'll Encounter (And How to Compare Them)
Per-certificate, flat-rate, square-foot, tiered enterprise — COI tracker pricing models are wildly inconsistent across vendors. Here's how to compare apples to apples.
Workers Comp Tracking Is Different — Here's What Most Platforms Get Wrong
Workers compensation insurance has rules that don't apply to other COI lines. Most COI platforms treat it like general liability. That's a problem.