Tag: success

  • Research shows success of working from home depends on company health

    جب کہ مزید کاروبار دور دراز کے کاموں میں منتقل ہوتے رہتے ہیں، کچھ معروف سی ای او اس تحریک کے خلاف ثابت قدم رہتے ہیں۔ مسوری یونیورسٹی کے اسکول آف میڈیسن میں ہیلتھ مینجمنٹ اور انفارمیٹکس کے ایک ایسوسی ایٹ پروفیسر نریش کھتری نے کہا کہ دور دراز کے کام میں منتقل ہونے کی کامیابی کا انحصار انفرادی ملازمین کے ساتھ ایڈجسٹ کرنے کے لیے تنظیم کی لچک اور ان کے لیے دستیاب ٹیکنالوجی پر ہے۔

    ایک ماہر کی حیثیت سے جس نے صحت کی دیکھ بھال کرنے والی تنظیموں کے اندر تنظیمی ڈھانچے اور انتظام کے بارے میں 60 سے زیادہ تحقیقی مضامین اور کتابی ابواب شائع کیے ہیں۔، کھتری نے کہا کہ ملازمین کو ایک اختیار کے طور پر دور دراز کے کام کی پیشکش ایک طاقتور بھرتی ٹول کے طور پر کام کر سکتی ہے اور ایک ایسا آلہ جس پر صحیح تنظیمیں آسانی سے عمل درآمد کر سکتی ہیں…



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  • Warner Bros. Discovery continues to lose money despite success of ‘The Last of Us’ and ‘Hogwarts Legacy’

    وارنر برادرز ڈسکوری (WBD) اطلاع دی کل Q4 کے نتائج میں کمی آئی، جس میں مزید $2.1 بلین کا خالص نقصان ہوا، جس میں اس کے اسٹریمنگ ڈویژن سے $217 ملین بھی شامل ہے۔ یہ اس کے باوجود ہے کہ کمپنی اپنی نئی اصل سیریز کی کامیابی پر زور دے رہی ہے۔ہم میں سے آخری\”جس کے اوسطاً 15 ملین سے زیادہ ناظرین تھے، اور حال ہی میں لانچ ہونے والی ویڈیو گیم Hogwarts Legacy، جس نے صرف دو ہفتوں میں خوردہ فروخت میں $850 ملین سے زیادہ دیکھا۔

    کمپنی نے تقریباً 11.36 بلین ڈالر کی آمدنی کے تجزیہ کاروں کے تخمینے کو بمشکل کھو دیا، جس سے 11 بلین ڈالر کمائے گئے – جو کہ 9.82 بلین ڈالر سے ایک نمایاں اضافہ ہے۔ Q3 2022. اس کے علاوہ، سٹریمنگ سیگمنٹ کی آمدنی میں 6 فیصد اضافہ ہوا جو کہ $2.45 بلین ہو گیا، جس نے وال سٹریٹ کی $2.39 بلین کی پیشن گوئی کو مات دی۔

    اس کے علاوہ، کمپنی سبسکرائبرز کے تخمینے کو مات دینے میں ناکام رہی، جس نے HBO، HBO Max اور Discovery+ میں صرف 1.1 ملین سبسکرائب کا اضافہ کیا، بمقابلہ 1.6 ملین خالص اضافے، نئے کل کو 96.1 ملین تک لے آئے۔ WBD بھی پچھلی سہ ماہی میں توقعات سے محروم رہا، صرف 3.27 ملین کے متوقع خالص اضافے کے بجائے صرف 2.8 ملین سبسکرائبر حاصل ہوئے۔ ڈبلیو بی ڈی اب بھی اسٹریمنگ دیو کے پیچھے ہے۔ نیٹ فلکس، جس کے 230 ملین عالمی صارفین ہیں۔

    ایچ بی او میکس سبسکرائبرز کا نیا اضافہ بنیادی طور پر سٹریمنگ سروس کی واپسی سے ہوا تھا۔ ایمیزون پرائم ویڈیو چینلز، نیز مقبول شوز کی پہلی شروعات جیسے \”ہم میں سے آخریاور \”The White Lotus\” کا دوسرا سیزن جو جیت گیا۔ 10 ایمیز اور دو گولڈن گلوب ایوارڈز. کمپنی حال ہی میں اعلان کیا کہ \”ہم میں سے آخری\” کو دوسرا سیزن ملے گا۔

    تاہم، HBO Max اور Discovery+ WBD کے لیے ابھی تک منافع بخش نہیں ہوئے ہیں – جو اسے دوسری میڈیا کمپنیوں کی طرح ہی کشتی میں ڈالتا ہے۔ دوسری طرف، Netflix منافع میں بدل گیا ہے.

    روشن پہلو پر، ڈبلیو بی ڈی کے سی ای او ڈیوڈ زسلاو نے سرمایہ کاروں کو بتایا کہ انضمام سے متعلق تنظیم نو آخر میں مکمل ہے. گزشتہ 10 ماہ کے دوران، کمپنی نے لاگو کیا ہے برطرفی بہت سے لوگوں کے ساتھ فلم اور ٹی وی کی منسوخی تاکہ اس کے قرضوں کے پہاڑ کو کم کیا جا سکے۔

    \”ہم نے گزشتہ 10 مہینوں کے دوران جرات مندانہ، فیصلہ کن کارروائی کی، اور ہماری تنظیم نو کا بڑا حصہ ہمارے پیچھے ہے۔ ہمارے پاس اپنے کاروبار کی مکمل کمانڈ اور کنٹرول ہے، اور ہم اب ایک کمپنی ہیں۔ ہمارے پاس ایک شاندار قیادت کی ٹیم ہے جو ہمیں آگے بڑھا رہی ہے، ہر کوئی ایک ہی سمت میں کھڑا ہے۔ اور ایک ساتھ مل کر، ہم اپنے کاروبار کو بہتر اور مضبوط بنانے پر مرکوز ہیں،\” زسلاو نے کمائی کال کے دوران کہا۔ \”پچھلا سال تنظیم نو کا سال تھا۔ 2023 تعمیر کا سال ہو گا۔

    انضمام کے بارے میں بات کرتے ہوئے، Zaslav نے اعلان کیا کہ نیا HBO Max/Discovery+ سٹریمنگ سروس اگلے چند ماہ میں شروع ہو جائے گا. کمپنی مزید تفصیلات 12 اپریل کو ایک خصوصی پریس ایونٹ کے دوران ظاہر کرے گی۔

    اس نے یہ بھی تصدیق کی کہ Discovery+ رہے گا۔ اسٹینڈ اکیلے سروس ان صارفین کے لیے جو ماہانہ $4.99 کی کم قیمت ادا کرتے رہنا چاہتے ہیں۔ دریں اثنا، HBO Max کو اب بھی Discovery+ مواد کے ساتھ ملایا جائے گا۔ پچھلے مہینے، WBD قیمت بڑھا دی پہلی بار HBO Max کے اشتہار سے پاک پلان، لاگت کو $14.99 سے بڑھا کر $15.99 فی ماہ۔

    اب جب کہ WBD تنظیم نو کے ساتھ کیا گیا ہے، یہ اپنے اصل مواد کی کیٹلاگ کو بڑھانے پر توجہ دے سکتا ہے۔ مثال کے طور پر، زسلاو نے \”لارڈ آف دی رِنگز\” کے شائقین کے لیے دلچسپ خبروں کا انکشاف کیا، یہ اعلان کرتے ہوئے کہ وارنر برادرز اسٹوڈیوز نے فرنچائز پر مبنی متعدد فلمیں بنانے کا معاہدہ کیا۔

    زسلاو نے کہا کہ کمپنی اپنے دوسرے آئی پی کا بھی \”مکمل فائدہ اٹھائے گی\”، بشمول \”سپرمین،\” \”بیٹ مین\” اور \”ہیری پوٹر\”۔

    حال ہی میں، ڈی سی اسٹوڈیو کے شریک چیئرمین جیمز گن اور پیٹر سیفران مشترکہ آنے والے 10 مووی اور ٹی وی پروجیکٹس، جیسے کہ \”Superman: Legacy,\” \”The Batman – Part II،\” \”Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow\” اور مزید۔

    Zaslav نے مزید کہا کہ \”مجھے یقین ہے کہ ہمارے پاس موجود IP کے ساتھ مارکیٹ میں ہمیں بہت زیادہ فائدہ ہے۔\” \”ہمارے پاس اثاثوں کے مکمل پورٹ فولیو اور عالمی سطح پر مشہور فرنچائزز، شخصیات اور کہانی سنانے والے IP کے ساتھ، کھیلوں، خبروں، نان فکشن اور تفریح، دنیا کے تقریباً ہر علاقے اور ہر زبان میں صنعت میں ہمارے پاس سب سے مضبوط ہاتھ ہے۔\”

    اس سال آنے والے عنوانات ہیں \”شازم! فیوری آف دی گاڈز، جو 17 مارچ کو سینما گھروں میں آئے گی۔ \”فلیشجو اس موسم گرما میں 16 جون کو ڈیبیو کرے گی۔ اور \”ایکوامین اینڈ دی لوسٹ کنگڈم\”، جس میں جیسن موموا کی اداکاری ہے، 25 دسمبر کو پریمیئر ہونے والی ہے۔ دیگر فلموں میں \”باربی\” فلم جس میں مارگوٹ روبی اور ریان گوسلنگ اداکاری کر رہے ہیں، \”ڈیون: پارٹ ٹو\” اور \”ونکا\” میں ٹموتھی چالمیٹ شامل ہیں۔

    کل، آمدنی کال سے پہلے، HBO اعلان کیا کہ اس نے \”IT\” سے متاثر میکس اصل سیریز کا آرڈر دیا جس کا نام \”Welcome to Derry\” ہے جو 2017 کی \”IT\” فلم اور \”IT Chapter Two\” کا پریکوئل ہوگا۔



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  • Build online branding to fuel startup success

    Are you an early-stage founder looking to add some rocket fuel to your startup? Join us at TechCrunch Early Stage on April 20 in Boston, Massachusetts, for the session \’How to Turn Your Startup into a Social Star\’. Josh Machiz, Partner at Redpoint Ventures, and Rashad Assir, Head of Content at Redpoint Ventures, will be breaking down how to build an engaged online community and create a standout brand for your business. Josh brings 10 years of experience as the Chief Digital Officer at Nasdaq and Rashad has turned his TikTok hobby into a full-time job producing Redpoint\’s daily videos. Get answers to your questions, and buy an early-bird founder ticket now to save $200.



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  • Showing customer success platforms haven\’t lost steam, Vitally secures $30M

    Customer success platforms (CSPs), or software designed to help business-to-business companies manage and monitor their customer success efforts, are increasingly in demand. According to a Research and Markets report, the market for global CSPs will be worth $3.1 billion by 2026.

    Some sources attribute the sector’s growth to the economic impact of the pandemic, which they say forced companies to double down on customer success efforts as the world shifted to digital channels. Whether that’s true or not, CSP vendors have clearly benefitted from the uptick in interest. Case in point, Vitally, which sells CSP software, today announced that it raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Next47 with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, HubSpot Ventures and NewView Capital.

    With the fresh cash, Vitally’s total raised stands at $40.6 million. (The company didn’t disclose its exact valuation, but it’s reportedly 5x higher than the previous.) Co-founder and CEO Jamie Davidson says that it’s being put mostly toward hiring and product development efforts; Vitally plans to double the size of its 62-person workforce by 2024.

    So Vitally’s raising money. But is there anything tangible that sets it apart from the other CSPs out there? After all, Spark and Catalyst have attracted cash, too, for their respective data-driven CSP products. Totango, another rival, landed $100 million in a growth investment in September 2021.

    Davidson — who prior to Vitally co-founded Pathgather, a talent development platform that was acquired by Degreed in 2018 — argues that the current generation of CSPs and productivity tools fall short of helping customer success teams do their best work.

    “Today’s CSPs lack critical project management and product reporting capabilities, while productivity tools do not integrate with essential sources of customer data located across the tech stack,” he told TechCrunch in an email interview. “These tools force businesses to either manage work out of a platform that is not designed for productivity or use separate platforms to manage customer data and daily activity. In either case, customer success teams are left unhappy and inefficient.”

    \"Vitally\"

    Image Credits: Vitally

    Vitally improves on this, Davidson claims, by combining productivity and collaboration tools — tools along the lines of what you’d find in Notion, Asana or Monday.com — in a single workspace. An automation tool gives users a way to quickly build customer success workflows, like email campaign workflows, while project and task trackers help keep teams and customers aligned (at least in theory). Vitally’s Docs and Hubs products, meanwhile, leverage customer data to automatically fill fields like customer account information and help teams — e.g., account management, onboarding, etc. — organize and manage their work.

    “In one of the most challenging funding markets, particularly for growth rounds, we started and closed our series B — from first discussion to signed term sheets — in just two weeks,” Davidson said. “The reason our investors made such a quick decision to back Vitally, even in a very tough investment climate, is that we are reinventing work for business-to-business customer success … Vitally operates as both the source of truth for customer data and the home for post-sale operations.”

    At least a few companies believe that to be the case — Segment, Productboard, Deel and Spiff are among Vitally’s paying customers. Davidson claims that revenue grew 4x since the start of 2022, but wouldn’t divulge the specific figures.

    When asked about the macroeconomic challenges that might lie ahead, Davidson said he’s confident that CSPs as a software category represent an even larger market opportunity than sales and marketing automation. VCs, he believes, will continue to prioritize investments that incorporate strong product-led growth — a strength of Vitally’s, in his mind.

    “The broader economic slowdown makes customer success teams and Vitally more essential than ever,” Davidson said. “Customer success teams remain critical for preserving revenue — i.e. reducing churn and driving expansion. At the same time, those teams are being asked to operate more effectively with fewer resources, both directly and indirectly. Vitally makes that possible. In times of growth, customer success teams using Vitally can accelerate. In a slowdown, Vitally helps customer success teams preserve revenue and generally keeps the company on an even keel.”

    Davidson drew particular attention to HubSpot’s participation in Vitally’s Series B round, which he took as a major vote of confidence from a well-established player. When contacted for comment via email, HubSpot head of ventures had this to say: “HubSpot and Vitally share a mission of making companies successful in every interaction with their customers … Our investment and partnership with Vitally are of strategic importance to HubSpot, and we have only scratched the surface of the value we can deliver to the market and our customers.”



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  • Showing customer success platforms haven\’t lost steam, Vitally secures $30M

    Customer success platforms (CSPs), or software designed to help business-to-business companies manage and monitor their customer success efforts, are increasingly in demand. According to a Research and Markets report, the market for global CSPs will be worth $3.1 billion by 2026.

    Some sources attribute the sector’s growth to the economic impact of the pandemic, which they say forced companies to double down on customer success efforts as the world shifted to digital channels. Whether that’s true or not, CSP vendors have clearly benefitted from the uptick in interest. Case in point, Vitally, which sells CSP software, today announced that it raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Next47 with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, HubSpot Ventures and NewView Capital.

    With the fresh cash, Vitally’s total raised stands at $40.6 million. (The company didn’t disclose its exact valuation, but it’s reportedly 5x higher than the previous.) Co-founder and CEO Jamie Davidson says that it’s being put mostly toward hiring and product development efforts; Vitally plans to double the size of its 62-person workforce by 2024.

    So Vitally’s raising money. But is there anything tangible that sets it apart from the other CSPs out there? After all, Spark and Catalyst have attracted cash, too, for their respective data-driven CSP products. Totango, another rival, landed $100 million in a growth investment in September 2021.

    Davidson — who prior to Vitally co-founded Pathgather, a talent development platform that was acquired by Degreed in 2018 — argues that the current generation of CSPs and productivity tools fall short of helping customer success teams do their best work.

    “Today’s CSPs lack critical project management and product reporting capabilities, while productivity tools do not integrate with essential sources of customer data located across the tech stack,” he told TechCrunch in an email interview. “These tools force businesses to either manage work out of a platform that is not designed for productivity or use separate platforms to manage customer data and daily activity. In either case, customer success teams are left unhappy and inefficient.”

    \"Vitally\"

    Image Credits: Vitally

    Vitally improves on this, Davidson claims, by combining productivity and collaboration tools — tools along the lines of what you’d find in Notion, Asana or Monday.com — in a single workspace. An automation tool gives users a way to quickly build customer success workflows, like email campaign workflows, while project and task trackers help keep teams and customers aligned (at least in theory). Vitally’s Docs and Hubs products, meanwhile, leverage customer data to automatically fill fields like customer account information and help teams — e.g., account management, onboarding, etc. — organize and manage their work.

    “In one of the most challenging funding markets, particularly for growth rounds, we started and closed our series B — from first discussion to signed term sheets — in just two weeks,” Davidson said. “The reason our investors made such a quick decision to back Vitally, even in a very tough investment climate, is that we are reinventing work for business-to-business customer success … Vitally operates as both the source of truth for customer data and the home for post-sale operations.”

    At least a few companies believe that to be the case — Segment, Productboard, Deel and Spiff are among Vitally’s paying customers. Davidson claims that revenue grew 4x since the start of 2022, but wouldn’t divulge the specific figures.

    When asked about the macroeconomic challenges that might lie ahead, Davidson said he’s confident that CSPs as a software category represent an even larger market opportunity than sales and marketing automation. VCs, he believes, will continue to prioritize investments that incorporate strong product-led growth — a strength of Vitally’s, in his mind.

    “The broader economic slowdown makes customer success teams and Vitally more essential than ever,” Davidson said. “Customer success teams remain critical for preserving revenue — i.e. reducing churn and driving expansion. At the same time, those teams are being asked to operate more effectively with fewer resources, both directly and indirectly. Vitally makes that possible. In times of growth, customer success teams using Vitally can accelerate. In a slowdown, Vitally helps customer success teams preserve revenue and generally keeps the company on an even keel.”

    Davidson drew particular attention to HubSpot’s participation in Vitally’s Series B round, which he took as a major vote of confidence from a well-established player. When contacted for comment via email, HubSpot head of ventures had this to say: “HubSpot and Vitally share a mission of making companies successful in every interaction with their customers … Our investment and partnership with Vitally are of strategic importance to HubSpot, and we have only scratched the surface of the value we can deliver to the market and our customers.”



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  • Showing customer success platforms haven\’t lost steam, Vitally secures $30M

    Customer success platforms (CSPs), or software designed to help business-to-business companies manage and monitor their customer success efforts, are increasingly in demand. According to a Research and Markets report, the market for global CSPs will be worth $3.1 billion by 2026.

    Some sources attribute the sector’s growth to the economic impact of the pandemic, which they say forced companies to double down on customer success efforts as the world shifted to digital channels. Whether that’s true or not, CSP vendors have clearly benefitted from the uptick in interest. Case in point, Vitally, which sells CSP software, today announced that it raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Next47 with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, HubSpot Ventures and NewView Capital.

    With the fresh cash, Vitally’s total raised stands at $40.6 million. (The company didn’t disclose its exact valuation, but it’s reportedly 5x higher than the previous.) Co-founder and CEO Jamie Davidson says that it’s being put mostly toward hiring and product development efforts; Vitally plans to double the size of its 62-person workforce by 2024.

    So Vitally’s raising money. But is there anything tangible that sets it apart from the other CSPs out there? After all, Spark and Catalyst have attracted cash, too, for their respective data-driven CSP products. Totango, another rival, landed $100 million in a growth investment in September 2021.

    Davidson — who prior to Vitally co-founded Pathgather, a talent development platform that was acquired by Degreed in 2018 — argues that the current generation of CSPs and productivity tools fall short of helping customer success teams do their best work.

    “Today’s CSPs lack critical project management and product reporting capabilities, while productivity tools do not integrate with essential sources of customer data located across the tech stack,” he told TechCrunch in an email interview. “These tools force businesses to either manage work out of a platform that is not designed for productivity or use separate platforms to manage customer data and daily activity. In either case, customer success teams are left unhappy and inefficient.”

    \"Vitally\"

    Image Credits: Vitally

    Vitally improves on this, Davidson claims, by combining productivity and collaboration tools — tools along the lines of what you’d find in Notion, Asana or Monday.com — in a single workspace. An automation tool gives users a way to quickly build customer success workflows, like email campaign workflows, while project and task trackers help keep teams and customers aligned (at least in theory). Vitally’s Docs and Hubs products, meanwhile, leverage customer data to automatically fill fields like customer account information and help teams — e.g., account management, onboarding, etc. — organize and manage their work.

    “In one of the most challenging funding markets, particularly for growth rounds, we started and closed our series B — from first discussion to signed term sheets — in just two weeks,” Davidson said. “The reason our investors made such a quick decision to back Vitally, even in a very tough investment climate, is that we are reinventing work for business-to-business customer success … Vitally operates as both the source of truth for customer data and the home for post-sale operations.”

    At least a few companies believe that to be the case — Segment, Productboard, Deel and Spiff are among Vitally’s paying customers. Davidson claims that revenue grew 4x since the start of 2022, but wouldn’t divulge the specific figures.

    When asked about the macroeconomic challenges that might lie ahead, Davidson said he’s confident that CSPs as a software category represent an even larger market opportunity than sales and marketing automation. VCs, he believes, will continue to prioritize investments that incorporate strong product-led growth — a strength of Vitally’s, in his mind.

    “The broader economic slowdown makes customer success teams and Vitally more essential than ever,” Davidson said. “Customer success teams remain critical for preserving revenue — i.e. reducing churn and driving expansion. At the same time, those teams are being asked to operate more effectively with fewer resources, both directly and indirectly. Vitally makes that possible. In times of growth, customer success teams using Vitally can accelerate. In a slowdown, Vitally helps customer success teams preserve revenue and generally keeps the company on an even keel.”

    Davidson drew particular attention to HubSpot’s participation in Vitally’s Series B round, which he took as a major vote of confidence from a well-established player. When contacted for comment via email, HubSpot head of ventures had this to say: “HubSpot and Vitally share a mission of making companies successful in every interaction with their customers … Our investment and partnership with Vitally are of strategic importance to HubSpot, and we have only scratched the surface of the value we can deliver to the market and our customers.”



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  • Showing customer success platforms haven\’t lost steam, Vitally secures $30M

    Customer success platforms (CSPs), or software designed to help business-to-business companies manage and monitor their customer success efforts, are increasingly in demand. According to a Research and Markets report, the market for global CSPs will be worth $3.1 billion by 2026.

    Some sources attribute the sector’s growth to the economic impact of the pandemic, which they say forced companies to double down on customer success efforts as the world shifted to digital channels. Whether that’s true or not, CSP vendors have clearly benefitted from the uptick in interest. Case in point, Vitally, which sells CSP software, today announced that it raised $30 million in a Series B round led by Next47 with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, HubSpot Ventures and NewView Capital.

    With the fresh cash, Vitally’s total raised stands at $40.6 million. (The company didn’t disclose its exact valuation, but it’s reportedly 5x higher than the previous.) Co-founder and CEO Jamie Davidson says that it’s being put mostly toward hiring and product development efforts; Vitally plans to double the size of its 62-person workforce by 2024.

    So Vitally’s raising money. But is there anything tangible that sets it apart from the other CSPs out there? After all, Spark and Catalyst have attracted cash, too, for their respective data-driven CSP products. Totango, another rival, landed $100 million in a growth investment in September 2021.

    Davidson — who prior to Vitally co-founded Pathgather, a talent development platform that was acquired by Degreed in 2018 — argues that the current generation of CSPs and productivity tools fall short of helping customer success teams do their best work.

    “Today’s CSPs lack critical project management and product reporting capabilities, while productivity tools do not integrate with essential sources of customer data located across the tech stack,” he told TechCrunch in an email interview. “These tools force businesses to either manage work out of a platform that is not designed for productivity or use separate platforms to manage customer data and daily activity. In either case, customer success teams are left unhappy and inefficient.”

    \"Vitally\"

    Image Credits: Vitally

    Vitally improves on this, Davidson claims, by combining productivity and collaboration tools — tools along the lines of what you’d find in Notion, Asana or Monday.com — in a single workspace. An automation tool gives users a way to quickly build customer success workflows, like email campaign workflows, while project and task trackers help keep teams and customers aligned (at least in theory). Vitally’s Docs and Hubs products, meanwhile, leverage customer data to automatically fill fields like customer account information and help teams — e.g., account management, onboarding, etc. — organize and manage their work.

    “In one of the most challenging funding markets, particularly for growth rounds, we started and closed our series B — from first discussion to signed term sheets — in just two weeks,” Davidson said. “The reason our investors made such a quick decision to back Vitally, even in a very tough investment climate, is that we are reinventing work for business-to-business customer success … Vitally operates as both the source of truth for customer data and the home for post-sale operations.”

    At least a few companies believe that to be the case — Segment, Productboard, Deel and Spiff are among Vitally’s paying customers. Davidson claims that revenue grew 4x since the start of 2022, but wouldn’t divulge the specific figures.

    When asked about the macroeconomic challenges that might lie ahead, Davidson said he’s confident that CSPs as a software category represent an even larger market opportunity than sales and marketing automation. VCs, he believes, will continue to prioritize investments that incorporate strong product-led growth — a strength of Vitally’s, in his mind.

    “The broader economic slowdown makes customer success teams and Vitally more essential than ever,” Davidson said. “Customer success teams remain critical for preserving revenue — i.e. reducing churn and driving expansion. At the same time, those teams are being asked to operate more effectively with fewer resources, both directly and indirectly. Vitally makes that possible. In times of growth, customer success teams using Vitally can accelerate. In a slowdown, Vitally helps customer success teams preserve revenue and generally keeps the company on an even keel.”

    Davidson drew particular attention to HubSpot’s participation in Vitally’s Series B round, which he took as a major vote of confidence from a well-established player. When contacted for comment via email, HubSpot head of ventures had this to say: “HubSpot and Vitally share a mission of making companies successful in every interaction with their customers … Our investment and partnership with Vitally are of strategic importance to HubSpot, and we have only scratched the surface of the value we can deliver to the market and our customers.”



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