Scale Venture Partners
This article contains promotional content. (August 2021) |
This article contains promotional content. (August 2021) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Venture capital |
Predecessor | BA Venture Partners |
Founded | 2000 |
Headquarters | Foster City, California, U.S. |
Products | Investments |
Total assets | US$1.9 billion |
Website | www |
Scale Venture Partners is an early-stage venture capital firm that invests in Series A and Series B rounds. Scale has invested in over 380 Cloud, SaaS, and infrastructure companies over the past 20 years. Of these investments, 159 have resulted in exits, including IPOs for companies like Bill.com, Box, DocuSign, HubSpot, RingCentral, Root Insurance, and WalkMe.
Scale believes that innovations in Cloud, AI, machine learning, and data are combining to transform enterprise software and infrastructure through what the company calls "Cognitive Applications".[1] Today, Scale continues to make early investments in markets like DataOps, DevOps, digital health, Fintech, infrastructure, open source, productivity, vertical SaaS, security, and AI-enabled apps.
Scale offers a Scaling Platform that uses executive networks, go-to-market playbooks, private communities, and Scale Studio benchmarks to help startups founder-led growth to a repeatable go-to-market machine.
Scale launched a data-product, Scale Studio, in 2018[2][3] to analyze and benchmark SaaS-metrics “Vital Signs” like: growth, efficiency, churn and burn.
Scale is based in Foster City, California.[4][5]
History
[edit]The firm was founded in 2000 as BA Venture Partners,[6] and functioned as the venture capital arm of Bank of America, where it raised its first two funds.
In 2007, the firm spun out from Bank of America and changed its name to Scale Venture Partners. Scale's $600 million Fund VII was launched in December 2020.[7]
SaaS and cloud investments
[edit]Scale invests in enterprise software startups that are between $500,000 – $5,000,000 in annual revenue, within SaaS and Cloud, Scale focuses on markets like: AI and ML, productivity, open source, cybersecurity, dev-ops, big data and automation for industries that have traditionally been low-tech.
Investments of note[by whom?] include:
- Bill.com
- Box.com
- CircleCI
- CloudHealth
- DemandBase
- Docusign
- ExactTarget
- Expel
- Forter
- Honeycomb
- Hubspot
- JFrog
- KeepTruckin
- Locus Robotics
- Omniture
- OneLogin
- Papaya Global
- PerimiterX
- RingCentral
- Root
- Scout RFP
- Socure
- Spruce
- Treasure Data
- WalkMe
- Wrike
Scale Studio – SaaS metrics and benchmarks
[edit]Scale Studio is a free data-product that launched in July 2018[8] that analyzes financials and operating metrics from 1000+ private companies and provides SaaS-metrics and benchmarks for startup “Vital Signs” like: growth, efficiency, churn and burn.
The platform asks users to input their financial and operational data, and then produces a report which benchmarks performance against thousands of quarters of data from similar companies.[9]
References
[edit]- ^ "Cognitive Applications with Intelligence Inside".
- ^ "Scale Venture Partners plans to open up its startup-scaling software platform". SiliconANGLE. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ "Scale Venture Partners closes $400 million fund, launches Scale Studio to help startups benchmark growth". VentureBeat. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ Bhasin, Kim; Clark, Patrick (2017-11-20). "Robot Makers Fill Their War Chests in Fight Against Amazon". Bloomberg News. Archived from the original on 2017-11-21.
- ^ "Scale Venture Partners Form D". U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. 2015-11-19.
- ^ "Bank of America cuts loose venture arm". InvestmentNews. 2007-03-08. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ Partners, Scale Venture. "Scale Venture Partners Announces Close of New $600 Million Fund". www.prnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ "Scale Venture Partners closes $400 million fund, launches Scale Studio to help startups benchmark growth". VentureBeat. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
- ^ "Measuring and benchmarking the four vital signs of SaaS". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2021-05-26.