RJMetrics

RJMetrics is an American software company headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The company offers big data analytics to small and midsize businesses.[1]

RJMetrics
TypePrivate startup
IndustryComputer software
FoundedPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania (2008)
FounderJake Stein and Robert J. Moore
Headquarters
Philadelphia
,
U.S.
Number of employees
71 (September 2014)
Websitewww.rjmetrics.com

History

RJMetrics was founded in 2008 by Jake Stein and Robert J. Moore.[2] The company had over 300 customers as of September 2014.[3]

Funding

RJMetrics was a bootstrapped company[4] until it received its first round of funding in 2012. The seed round was $1.2 million and came from Red Swan Ventures, Vision Ventures, SoftTech VC, Zelkova Ventures, Lerer Ventures, and SV Angel.[5] In May 2013, RJMetrics received its Series A funding of $6.25 million from Trinity Ventures and SoftTech VC.[6]

In September 2014, RJMetrics received its Series B funding of $16.5 million from SoftTech VC, Trinity Ventures, and August Capital.[7] To-date, the Series B funding is one of the biggest rounds of funding received by a Philadelphia-based IT startup.[8]

Acquisition

In August 2016, Magento acquired RJMetrics, and Stitch, Inc. was spun out as an independent company, with the same investors as RJMetrics.

Platform

RJMetrics is a software as a service business intelligence platform.[9] In July 2014 RJMetrics announced the v2 release of its product and rebranded as an analytics platform.[10] The release included improvements to every major part of the software.

  • Analytic Warehouse: Built on Amazon Redshift
  • Transformation Cluster: Built on top of Hadoop
  • Visualization Interface: Allows users to perform cohort analysis, calculate repeat event probability, and combine data from multiple sources

Data journalism

RJMetrics has received a significant amount of press for their data journalism. Notable coverage includes:

  • The Wall Street Journal covering RJMetrics’ analysis of Crunchbase[11]
  • Fast Company covering RJMetrics’ analysis of Airbnb[12]
  • Forbes covering RJMetrics’ analysis of the ALS ice bucket challenge[13]
  • TechCrunch covering RJMetrics’ analysis of the Biz Stone's Jelly App[14]

In 2012, comedian Daniel Tosh covered RJMetrics' analysis of Chatroulette[15]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.