
Jedox
Jedox is a technology company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Jedox.

Jedox is a technology company.
Key people at Jedox.
Key people at Jedox.
Jedox is a privately held enterprise performance management (EPM) and adaptive financial planning platform that helps organizations unify planning, reporting, forecasting and analytics across finance and operational functions using in‑memory processing and AI-enabled features[2][6].
High‑Level Overview
Jedox builds an adaptable, cloud and on‑premises performance‑management platform that combines planning, budgeting, forecasting, reporting and analytics with Excel‑style interfaces, web and mobile access, and an AI layer (JedoxAI)[2][6].
Its customers include more than ~2,900 organizations across roughly 140 countries, spanning finance, sales, HR and supply‑chain use cases where integrated planning and fast scenario modeling matter[7][2].
For an investment firm (not applicable — Jedox is a product company).
For a portfolio/company view (Jedox as a portfolio company):
Origin Story
Jedox was founded in 2002 by Kristian Raue following earlier work in related BI/OLAP products and released early worksheet/Excel‑centric server products and its PALO in‑memory OLAP engine before rebranding and expanding globally[4].
Early technical milestones included the Worksheet Server and PALO/in‑memory OLAP (mid‑2000s), international expansion with partner networks and acquisitions (e.g., Naked Data in Australia), and later investments in GPU acceleration and mobile/cloud capabilities that helped shift the company from an Excel‑centric OLAP vendor to an adaptable cloud EPM platform[4][2].
Core Differentiators
Role in the Broader Tech Landscape
Jedox rides the larger trend toward modernizing FP&A and EPM—moving away from fragmented spreadsheets and siloed BI toward unified, cloud‑native planning platforms with embedded automation and AI to handle volatility and scenario planning[2][6].
Timing matters because finance teams increasingly require real‑time, cross‑functional planning (integrated business planning), explainable AI for forecasts, and fast time‑to‑value amid macro uncertainty—areas Jedox targets with its platform and JedoxAI[2][6].
Market forces in its favor include growing demand for cloud EPM, regulatory and ESG reporting needs that drive consolidation of data sources, and enterprises seeking to reduce consulting/IT dependency by empowering business users[2][6][5].
Jedox influences the ecosystem by offering an option that balances Excel familiarity with modern platform capabilities, helping partners and consultants migrate legacy spreadsheet processes into governed, auditable planning workflows[3][4].
Quick Take & Future Outlook
What's next: Expect continued investment in AI-driven planning (more JedoxAI features), tighter integrations with major ERP/BI vendors, and further cloud and mobile enhancements to support decentralized, collaborative planning[2][6].
Trends that will shape Jedox: Increased adoption of explainable/agentic AI in finance, demand for integrated operational + financial planning, and pressure for faster implementations and lower TCO will favor adaptable platforms that combine ease of use with enterprise governance[2][6].
Potential influence: If Jedox continues to scale its partner network and AI capabilities, it can strengthen its position as a mid‑market/enterprise alternative to legacy EPM suites by lowering adoption friction for finance teams while enabling broader cross‑functional planning.
Quick reminder: this profile focuses on Jedox as a product company (EPM/FP&A); if you want a competitor comparison, financials, customer case studies, or recent funding/M&A activity, tell me which angle you want and I’ll add sourced detail.