Qatalog
Qatalog is a technology company.
Financial History
Qatalog has raised $30.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Qatalog raised?
Qatalog has raised $30.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Qatalog is a technology company.
Qatalog has raised $30.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Qatalog has raised $30.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Qatalog has raised $30.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Qatalog's investors include Kevin Hartz, Alt Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, AngelList Syndicator, Atomico, Bessemer Venture Partners, BITKRAFT Ventures, Coatue, Convective Capital, Coughdrop Capital, CRV, Cyphr VC.
Qatalog is a London-based technology company building an Enterprise Intelligence platform that unifies disparate SaaS tools into a single "virtual workspace" called the Work Graph, enabling teams to search, access information, automate workflows, and collaborate across apps like Notion, Slack, Google Workspace, Jira, and Asana.[1][2][6] It serves modern teams and enterprises struggling with tool sprawl, solving the problem of fragmented information silos by providing real-time, contextual access to data tied to people, teams, and projects, while automating routine tasks without requiring data duplication or rigid new systems.[2][4][5][6] Qatalog demonstrates strong growth momentum through integrations with major tools, AI-driven setup (e.g., building custom workspaces in 40 seconds), and features like zero-indexing for security, positioning it as a leader in productivity amid 2025 AI advancements.[3][4][6][7]
Qatalog was founded by Tariq Rauf, who recognized the need for a "source of truth" amid exploding SaaS fragmentation, where teams rely on unbeatable individual tools but lack a unified workspace, often resorting to spreadsheets or super Google Docs.[1][2] Emerging around 2020, the idea crystallized as Rauf aimed to re-bundle SaaS functionality by creating the Work Graph—a dynamic map connecting tools, people, teams, projects, and workflows—allowing seamless search, goal-setting, and two-way automation.[2] Early traction came from its launch disclosure in TechCrunch, highlighting its ability to plug into existing ecosystems and enable smarter collaboration, with pivotal evolution to Qatalog 2.0 introducing AI for rapid, bespoke workspace creation.[2][7]
Qatalog rides the AI-augmented productivity wave amid SaaS sprawl, where enterprises juggle 100+ tools but lose 20-30% efficiency to silos, perfectly timed with 2025's rise of agentic AI and multi-tool orchestration.[2][6] Market forces like remote/hybrid work, compliance demands, and AI adoption favor its non-intrusive "intelligence layer" approach, which enhances existing stacks rather than replacing them, reducing digital friction for knowledge workers.[1][5][6] It influences the ecosystem by pioneering Work Graphs as a standard for enterprise search and automation, empowering cross-functional teams in complex orgs and setting benchmarks for competitors like ClickUp alternatives.[4][6]
Qatalog is poised to dominate as the go-to AI work OS, with Qatalog 2.0's AI setup and Autopilot scaling to handle enterprise-grade automations in tool-heavy environments.[6][7] Trends like multimodal AI, deeper integrations, and zero-trust security will amplify its edge, potentially expanding to industry-specific Modules (e.g., agency client management) and predictive analytics.[4][6] Its influence may evolve from unifier to ecosystem orchestrator, capturing share in a $100B+ productivity market as teams demand effortless, sovereign AI—cementing its role in making fragmented SaaS stacks a relic of the pre-Work Graph era.[1][2]
Qatalog has raised $30.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $26.0M Series A in October 2020.