Today Salt Security, a startup that helps companies protect APIs, announced that it has closed a $20 million Series A. The Palo Alto-based company secured the new funds from Tenaya Capital, bringing its total capital raised to around $30 million.
The Salt round caught TechCrunch’s eye as it fits reasonably well into a growing trend of API-powered and focused startups raising capital in recent months. On the back of Plaid’s epic exit, and the continued success of Twilio, APIs appear to be a lucrative way for startups to build attractive revenue tallies that entice both investors and acquirers alike.
Notably Salt Security offers its API security service — the startup helps customers defend against API “attacks,” and find API-related “vulnerabilities,” per its website — as a SaaS application; the company did tell TechCrunch that it can also “integrate via API with other solutions in a customer’s environment,” for what it’s worth. Regardless, as Salt is a startup focused on the API economy, we wanted to note its funding event.
To get a handle on how the company managed to raise during a purportedly difficult time to attract new capital, TechCrunch dug in a little bit. Read on for growth notes, and some details on whether more startups are using APIs to power their businesses.
Growth
The short answer regarding how Salt managed to secure capital is growth, as far as TechCrunch can surmise: According to the firm, Salt “almost doubled [its] revenue in the first half of 2020 from the end of 2019 despite COVID-19 in addition to retaining our existing customers.” As the firm just raised a Series A, its 2019 end-of-year revenue tally likely wasn’t huge, but the company’s pace of topline expansion is precisely what private investors like to bet on.
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Alex Wilhelm
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Contact Information:
Alex Wilhelm