Scaled by someone who's
run the global table.

30 years in technology. Six countries. One conviction: the next infrastructure problem worth solving is trust.

Arup Aditya Co-Founder & Chief Commercial Officer, Mysterion

In the early 1990s, while most of his peers were learning what a PC could do, Arup was writing mainframe code — the kind that ran the back offices of banks, airlines, and governments. It was the age when "enterprise software" still meant a room full of humming metal, and the people who worked on it didn't just write programs. They wrote the systems the world depended on.

Three decades later, Arup has spent his career carrying that discipline forward — through every layer of how technology gets built, sold, and scaled. From programmer to project manager to client partner, through 17 years at IBM and leadership roles across global consulting practices, he has delivered multimillion-dollar engagements across six countries and the cultures, procurement cycles, and expectations of each.

He's closed deals in the United States. Built delivery teams in India. Navigated partnerships in China, France, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Ireland. He knows what it takes to move a signature from a term sheet to a production deployment — and what it costs when you don't understand the room you're standing in.

30 Years in Tech
17 Years at IBM
6 Countries

Delivered across:

USA India China France United Kingdom Australia Ireland

Arup joined Mysterion because the moment called for it. Generative AI is the biggest inflection point since the cloud — and, like every prior wave, it will not be solved by technology alone. It will be solved by the enterprises that adopt it, the procurement organizations that budget for it, and the partners who translate what's possible into what actually ships. That's the work he's done his entire career.

He saw in Mysterion what he'd spent thirty years preparing to build: a foundational trust layer — cryptographic, standards-aligned, creator-first — arriving exactly when the world needs it, and a co-founder who had already done the hardest part.

"Chris builds the system that proves trust. I build the relationships that make enterprises adopt it. Mysterion needs both — because technology that can't be sold is technology that can't protect anyone."

Today, Arup leads commercial strategy at Mysterion — partnerships, enterprise sales, channel development, and the work of turning a remarkable piece of infrastructure into something the world actually uses.

Want to partner with Mysterion or bring us into your organization?

Get in Touch