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§ Private Profile · 1123 Yale St Houston, Texas 77008, USA
Digital labor marketplace platform providing staffing solutions for caregivers in senior housing, post-acute, and nursing home facilities.
Kare has raised $8.0M across 1 funding round.
Key people at Kare.
Kare has raised $8.0M in total across 1 funding round.
KARE is a digital labor marketplace platform based in Houston, Texas, United States, that connects caregivers with senior housing, post-acute care, and nursing home facilities. The company has reported $294.1 million in revenue and employs 68 individuals. To date, KARE has secured $7.9 million in total funding. The platform positions itself as a digital labor marketplace focused on improving outcomes for both care operators and caregivers by addressing labor shortages within the senior care industry. Key figures in the organization include co-founders Charles Turner and Bridget Kaselak, who also serves as COO. KARE was founded in 2019 by Charles Turner and Bridget Kaselak. Its business model centers on as a digital labor marketplace, KARE likely generates revenue by facilitating transactions between caregivers and care facilities, though the specific revenue model is not detailed in available sources.
Kare has raised $8.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $8.0M Series A in August 2021.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 1, 2021 | $8M Series A | — | Golden Section Ventures | Announced |
Kare has raised $8.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Kare's investors include Golden Section Ventures.
Key people at Kare.
KARE Technologies is a technology company specializing in warehouse management systems (WMS), with its flagship product Visual Warehouse—a wireless, paperless, real-time system for inventory and distribution workflow management.[2][3][4] It serves manufacturing and distribution businesses of all sizes, from small operations to Fortune 500 companies, solving problems like inefficient inventory control, manual processes, and scalability issues through modular, integrable software that enhances operational efficiency.[2][3] A separate entity, KARE (doyoukare.com), develops software solutions focused on productivity and efficiency, primarily in health care and social assistance, while another KARE platform connects post-acute caregivers with senior living communities to reduce staffing costs.[1][6][7] KARE Technologies has operated for nearly 20 years, boasting a global presence, strong client testimonials, and additional services like custom integrations and consulting.[3][4]
KARE Technologies emerged around the early 2000s as a provider of automated data collection software, evolving into a leader in WMS solutions through nearly two decades of service, support, and innovation.[1][2][4] Specific founders are not detailed, but leadership includes a Founder & CEO and Executive VP of Technology, with headquarters shifting from East Providence/Cranston, Rhode Island, to locations supporting a network of resellers.[4][5] Early traction came from implementing Visual Warehouse globally across industries, including high-volume clients like a $2B Fortune 300 company shipping over $1M daily.[3] The related KARE software firm in Houston traces its roots to tech enthusiasts in the early 2000s turning coding passion into business, while the caregiver platform KARE focuses on empowering flexible schedules for post-acute care.[1][6]
KARE Technologies rides the wave of supply chain digitization and automation trends, accelerated by e-commerce growth, labor shortages, and demands for real-time visibility in manufacturing/distribution—critical as global logistics faces volatility from disruptions like pandemics or trade shifts.[2][3] Timing aligns with WMS market expansion, where modular, integrable systems like Visual Warehouse address scalability needs amid rising inventory complexities, influencing the ecosystem by enabling SMBs to compete with enterprises through cost-effective tools.[3][4] The caregiver-focused KARE taps into aging population-driven senior care demands, reducing operational costs via gig-economy platforms, while Houston KARE supports digital transitions in health tech.[1][6][7] Collectively, these entities contribute to niche efficiency gains, fostering productivity in underserved sectors like warehousing and post-acute care.
KARE Technologies is poised for growth in an automating supply chain market, potentially expanding Visual Warehouse's AI integrations or cloud capabilities to capture more mid-market share amid e-commerce booms. Trends like IoT-enabled warehouses and caregiver staffing shortages will shape its path, with influence growing through partnerships and global implementations. The health/caregiving KARE variants could scale via platform enhancements for regulatory compliance. Overall, their focus on practical, user-centric software positions them to thrive as businesses prioritize resilient operations—echoing their origins in turning tech passion into efficiency leaders.[2][3][6]