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OpenEvidence's Meteoric Rise Is Huge For Doctors
OpenEvidence's Meteoric Rise Is Huge For Doctors

Forbes

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Forbes

OpenEvidence's Meteoric Rise Is Huge For Doctors

Medical research and science has never been easier to access. OpenEvidence has raised hundreds of millions of dollars. In its most recent funding round, it raised a $210 million Series B from prominent investors such as Google Ventures and Kleiner Perkins, bringing the company's valuation to nearly $3.5 billion. The company's goal is straightforward and incredibly ambitious: to collate the entire corpus of medical knowledge and research developments in a way that is easily accessible to physicians and thereby, improve health outcomes. The service is aiming to provide a similar 'touch and feel' as other generative AI services such as Chat GPT or Google's Gemini—except, its target audience is primarily doctors. Medical science is a rapidly evolving field with a perpetually expanding sea of knowledge, especially as research and development across the fields of disease, therapeutics and human sciences continue to grow. In fact, as Sequoia Capital notes, 'a new PubMed article [which is often the flagship resource for peer-reviewed science studies]The value of this type of technology is increasingly being recognized. The latest models for OpenAI's ChatGPT (GPT 4.1 and o3) have displayed incredible efficacy in taking command of medical knowledge; in May, the company published its work with HealthBench, proposing a rubric for model performance in healthcare and also indicating that GPT's latest models performed at par or even better than standard physician evaluations. Even Google's Gemini family of models has made significant progress in this space; its MedLM suite, for example, is a highly tuned model that can aid the entire healthcare workflow, ranging from answering medical questions to deciphering unstructured health data. Why is all of this important? There are a few different reasons. First and foremost, this technology is aiming to democratize medical knowledge in a way that is easy to access. Furthermore, it comes at a time when the healthcare system, and its respective workforce, is facing unprecedented headwinds. Studies have repeatedly indicated that physician burnout and attrition are incredibly concerning problems for health systems and organizations of all sizes; physicians simply do not have the bandwidth to fulfill all of their patient care duties in addition to the increasingly prevalent administrative, compliance and regulatory burdens placed on them. This also means that there is less time for professional development and continuing education. These technologies can serve as a major advantage to the physician workflow as they provide an opportunity to easily query, fact-check and understand the latest science that is involved with a condition. Carry this even further with tools such as OpenEvidence DeepConsult, which gives physicians access to PhD-level AI agents that can conduct medical research, or Gemini's foundation models that can rapidly decipher medical images, or even AI scribing technology that can rapidly generate patient-physician encounter notes, and soon, hours can be saved from a physician's daily workflow. This translates not only to millions of dollars saved annually in system costs, but also to more time available to spend with patients, improved access to care, and ultimately, increased efficacy and quality of care provided.

How This 26-Year-Old Rescued A Failing Real Estate Startup—And Landed $58 Million From Google Ventures
How This 26-Year-Old Rescued A Failing Real Estate Startup—And Landed $58 Million From Google Ventures

Forbes

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

How This 26-Year-Old Rescued A Failing Real Estate Startup—And Landed $58 Million From Google Ventures

Think this is nice? It's a version of the weekly Under 30 newsletter and would be even better in your inbox . Din Bisevac and his team at Buena. Photo by Daniel Farò Two years after Din Bisevac joined German real estate startup Buena as a product designer, the company—which was focused on leasing properties—had burned through $14 million. A shutdown seemed inevitable. But on Thursday, Buena announced a $58 million Series A round led by Google Ventures, with backing from 20VC and Stride. It's the first raise since Bisevac stepped into the role of CEO in 2021. 'The original business model was kind of rent arbitrage. They would rent apartments at below market and try to rent them out above market,' the Under 30 Europe alum told Forbes . 'I spent the first year just restructuring, finding a good deal with the existing investors and basically pivoting the company.' Today, Buena has reinvented itself as a Berlin-based software startup offering property management tools for landlords. The platform works with property owners to automate everything from listing properties and managing viewings to vetting tenants and coordinating maintenance, right down to scheduling a handyman or janitor. As of June, it's managing more than 60,000 apartments across Germany and has hit $25 million in annual recurring revenue. Most of Buena's clients are private individuals—your typical apartment building owners—but the company has recently begun working with institutional investors managing hundreds of units. 'Property management just has a terrible, terrible brand in Germany. No matter which owner or tenant you ask, everyone will tell you they hate their property manager,' Bisevac says of the inspiration for the pivot. Still, with many clients used to the old-school way of doing things, he adds: 'We wouldn't position ourselves as this mainly technology company in front of our customers because it's a bit too abstract for them, and frankly just doesn't matter too much.' Bisevac may have been thrust into the CEO seat, but he's no stranger to entrepreneurship. Before 'content creator' was even a term, the now-26-year-old was one of Germany's earliest YouTube child stars, hosting a Jimmy Fallon-style talk show on his channel. By age nine, he'd launched his own clothing brand, which he says gained traction with his followers. After his parents made him quit the online fame, he built a Shopify site for the business. Soon after, a local IT firm hired him as a product designer, at just 13 years old, and he began homeschooling. He might regret stepping away from his internet stardom given the recent boom of the creator economy, but Bisevac is putting those same storytelling skills to work with Buena. His goal: make property ownership accessible to the younger generation—something like Robinhood for real estate. 'Our generation invests in ETFs, stocks, crypto, but we're missing the residential real estate part in our investment portfolios because we don't know how to do it,' he says. 'The broader vision with Buena is to become this end-to-end platform for people where you come to us to find an apartment you like, you buy it through us, we finance it for you, we manage it for you.' For now, the new funding will fuel expansion across Germany, with plans to land in the U.S. next, where the housing market is valued at some $50 trillion. More next week, Zoya, Alex and Alexandra Can A Chatbot Be Your Therapist? Casper's Neil Parikh Launches A New $93 Million-Backed Startup To Try Daniel Cahn (left) and Neil Parikh (right), cofounders of Slingshot AI. courtesy of slingshot Neil Parikh's first startup, Casper, made sleep as easy as clicking a few buttons and getting a mattress delivered to your door. Now he wants to make getting therapy just as accessible. Parikh's latest venture, Slingshot AI, launched a chatbot that's designed to replicate the experience of talking to a human therapist. Can it work, and why not just use ChatGPT, if so? Find out more here. On Our Radar -It's been six months since tens of thousands of federal employees began losing jobs due to DOGE budget cuts. What was meant to streamline the government and increase efficiency quickly turned into confusion and chaos across many federal agencies. "DOGE started to make itself known, it became a very strange, paranoid, alienating experience," Egan Reich, who resigned from his Department of Labor position in April, told Business Insider. "It became clear they really wanted people gone." He's not the only one with bitter feelings. ( Business Insider ) -Are we living amidst the second coming of Tyler Haney? The Outdoor Voices founder and 2016 Under 30 Retail & Ecommerce alum—who was ousted in 2020 and went on to build two other companies: TYB, a web 3 platform; and Joggy, a sports drink—is seemingly back in the drivers seat. The startup deleted all TikTok and Instagram posts and now follows just one Instagram account: @ty_haney. ( Inc. ) -Gen Z is looking for community, and they know the office is one place to get it. While it's true that only 6% of the young cohort prefers to work from the office all the time (only millennials are more opposed, with just 4% preferring in-office), they're actually the most likely to want to come in at least sometimes . 71% of Gen Zers say hybrid is their ideal environment. The loneliness they feel while WFH, plus the inability to learn from more experienced coworkers, appear to be major reasons. ( Gallup ) One Minute with Autumn-Kyoko Cushman We're bringing you the scoop on a new Under 30 community member. Up this week: 2025 Under 30 Healthcare lister Autumn-Kyoko Cushman, cofounder of ShiftRx—a digital marketplace that connects healthcare facilities with clinicians to fill staffing gaps. The following has been lightly edited for length and clarity. How did you get the inspiration for ShiftRx? My cofounder and I were burned-out clinicians. I spent five years in the Navy as a nurse, working 12-hour clinical shifts during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Eventually, I left and began researching cancer clinical trials at the National Institutes of Health. After that, I thought I was ready to leave healthcare until my mom was diagnosed with a rare form of brain cancer. Even with my healthcare connections, advocating for her as a patient was a nightmare. That experience made me realize how broken the system really is and I got pissed off. I quit my job, liquidated my savings, and roped in my best friend Leann, who was working as a pharmacy tech at CVS at the time. We knew someone had to address the staffing crisis, and we thought, 'Why not us?' What's one lesson you would go back and tell yourself when first starting as a founder? You are capable of doing anything. It is definitely rooted in delusion. Leann and I genuinely believed we could fix healthcare as two 27-year-olds. The older you get, the more you realize that no one really knows what they're doing. We didn't have all the answers, but we had passion—and that was enough to start. What's one thing you can't live without? My assistant Ashley. I love her—she's so freaking funny and keeps me sane. I stole her from another company five years ago, and she's by far my most valuable employee. When I'm in and out of meetings, working 100- to 120-hour weeks and barely sleeping or eating, she's the one taking care of me. She's the lock screen on my phone. I just love her. I also can't live without my AirPods. What does a day in your life currently look like? I get out of bed, make my bed, go on a 30-minute walk, and then do a 45-minute run—usually while calling Ashley, who briefs me on my day. Then I get on the phone with my cofounder. I like taking calls while running because it keeps me running longer. After that, I make breakfast and head into the office. I try to front-load all my meetings between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.—I'm usually in 40 to 60 hours of meetings a week. I do my deep work between 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. with a brief intermission for dinner. I end the day with stretching and 20 to 30 minutes of reading—whether it's a book, article, newsletter or clinical research paper. What's your favorite AI tool? I'm addicted to Superhuman, which is basically AI for emails. The instant intros and predictive text features are fantastic. What's something on your bucket list? I'd love to swim with orcas. There's a Norwegian university that runs expeditions studying how orcas interact with humans in their natural environments, and I'm desperate to go. I could talk for 30 minutes about how intelligent and fascinating they are. Who is someone—dead or alive—that you would love to have coffee with? Anna Wintour. She's such a trailblazer and forward thinker, taking Vogue from the print to the '.com' era. She's also just a genius, setting these cyclical fashion trends that move with the times. She's not in my industry, but I think it's so cool to learn from people that are incredible operators in their own industries. What does ShiftRx's next chapter look like? The next chapter looks like fixing healthcare operations, improving patient outcomes, and automating tasks clinicians shouldn't have to worry about. We're stepping into the next phase of AI-native applications to improve the patient experience—making sure clinicians can focus solely on patient care.

‘Click' Review: How to Serve Hot Apps
‘Click' Review: How to Serve Hot Apps

Wall Street Journal

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • Wall Street Journal

‘Click' Review: How to Serve Hot Apps

Within five days of its launch, ChatGPT reached one million users—making it the fastest-growing consumer application at the time. Its immediate appeal highlights how quickly a product can grow when it captures imaginations and fills unmet needs. In 'Click: How to Make What People Want,' Jake Knapp and John Zeratsky examine what makes a product or service resonate with consumers. The authors outline a process for early-stage founders to follow in their quest to create the next revolutionary thing, beginning with what they call the foundation sprint: 'drop everything and sprint on the most important challenge until it's done,' they tell us, starting with 'identifying your customer and a real problem you can solve.' Drawing largely on conventional business-school wisdom, Messrs. Knapp and Zeratsky—both former partners at Google Ventures—stick to well-trodden paths, such as finding 'your team's unique advantages' and ensuring product differentiation. These are good reminders for aspiring entrepreneurs. Also familiar will be the heralded 2-by-2 chart, which tidily distills complex decisions into pairs of factors, helping users quickly identify which quadrant they are in. Yet as the authors warn, oversimplifying decisions can have unintended consequences, causing founders to overlook the broader societal impacts of their products. 'The only thing worse than a project that flops is one that clicks—but accidentally screws up customers' lives,' the authors write, noting that many new technologies 'take more away from us than they give.' We should strive for technology that makes the world better—not only different.

Read-it-later app Pocket is shutting down. Here are the best alternatives.
Read-it-later app Pocket is shutting down. Here are the best alternatives.

TechCrunch

time27-05-2025

  • Business
  • TechCrunch

Read-it-later app Pocket is shutting down. Here are the best alternatives.

In May 2025, Mozilla announced that it was shutting down the popular read-it-later app Pocket, which it had acquired back in 2017 for an undisclosed amount. While Pocket helped users save and discover millions of articles, Mozilla said the way people are browsing the web is changing, and it plans to focus its resources on other projects. Pocket users have until October 8, 2025, to export their saved articles and other items, including lists, archives, favorites, notes, and highlights. This essentially means you will have to find a new home to build a reading list through another save-it-later app. To help users with this transition, we've rounded up a number of apps you might want to consider: Matter is a Google Ventures-backed company that makes an eponymous iOS app along with browser extensions for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox. The app lets you listen to articles and also transcribes your favorite podcasts. Though the app itself is free to use, you can pay $79.99 per year to unlock features like improved transcriptions for podcasts and YouTube videos, tools to adjust reading speed, and additional integrations with other apps like notes apps, Gmail, and Kindle. Screenshot Image Credits:Matter In March 2025, the company also added an AI-powered co-reader to answer questions about different topics users might have while reading an article. Matter co-founder Ben Springwater says Pocket users can email him at ben@ for a personal discount link. The company will soon offer the discount within its app and will launch a migration process for Pocket users. Techcrunch event Join us at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot for our leading AI industry event with speakers from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Cohere. For a limited time, tickets are just $292 for an entire day of expert talks, workshops, and potent networking. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW Instapaper, which was founded by developer Marco Arment in 2008, is one of the oldest read-it-later apps. It's available on both iOS and Android, and lets you save unlimited articles and videos without paying any fees. It was acquired by Pinterest in 2016. Image Credits:Instapaper However, for $59.99 per year, you can add notes to saved articles, have a permanent archive of articles in your accounts, create a text-to-speech playlist to listen to stories, enable full text search for all saved items, and get the ability to send articles to your Kindle. The company says Pocket users can import their account into Instapaper at Users who import this way will also receive an email offering a three-month free trial to Instapaper Premium. Raindrop works primarily as an alternative bookmark manager for web browsers. However, its accompanying mobile apps for iOS and Android allow you to read your saved articles or PDFs at any time. The free version gives you unlimited bookmark saving along with integrations like Zapier and IFTTT. If you decide to pay $33 per year, you will get AI-powered suggestions for organizing your content better, full text-search, reminders for your bookmarks, a duplicate and broken links finder, and a file upload limit of 10GB per month. Image Credits: / Former Twitter engineer Joe Fabisevich created Plinky to allow users to save and categorize any kind of link, including articles, videos, recipes, and memes. The app is available across all Apple platforms, along with browser extensions to save links. Once signed up, Plinky lets you use folders and tags to categorize your links, and even set reminders to read them at a specific time. Image Credits:Plinky You can save 50 links, create three folders, and use five tags with the free version. To remove these restrictions, you can pay $3.99 per month, $39.99 a year, or a one-time fee of $159.99. Pro users are able to save unlimited links, create an unlimited number of folders, use an unlimited number of tags, and set an unlimited number of reminders. With Pocket's shutdown on the horizon, Fabisevich says a dedicated Reader Mode will be added to Plinky's app soon. The app is also offering a 50% discount on the Pro tier through the end of May 2025. Paperspan is a very simple app that offers a reading list across devices; allows you to add notes; and has text-to-speech functionality. The app is free, but it offers an $8.99 per month subscription to unlock advanced search, as well as the ability to create playlists, show reading stats, and send your articles to Kindle. Though the app works, PaperSpan hasn't been updated for some time, which may not be a good signal about its long-term future. The app is available on both iOS and Android. Readwise, a tool to add notes and highlights to articles, launched its Reader app in 2021. The app allows you to import RSS feeds, YouTube videos, Twitter threads, and more to read at your convenience. Because of its integration with Readwise, the Reader app offers great annotation features. It also features offline text search and an AI assistant. Image Credits:Readwise Reader Plus, you can integrate Reader with knowledge management apps such as Obsidian, Notion, Roam Research, Evernote, and Logseq. The app is free to try for 30 days, and then you have to pay a $9.99 per month Readwise subscription to access it. Readwise is letting Pocket users save their entire Pocket archive into Reader and notes that its app supports a number of features — like PDFs, ePubs, X posts, AI, and filtering — which Pocket never did. DoubleMemory is a new indie app focused on the Apple ecosystem, and it has native apps for both Mac and iOS. On Mac, you can easily save any link or content by pressing ' Cmd + C' twice. The saved content will then appear in a Pinterest-style tile format. The app also allows you to read offline and search through text, notes, and tags. You don't need an account to start using DoubleMemory. And if you have multiple apps, it uses your iCloud account to sync content across them. Image Credits:DoubleMemory DoubleMemory is free with in-app purchases. It offers a $3.99 monthly subscription or an annual subscription of $17.99. Recall works as a browser extension and a mobile app that allows users to save content from the web, including articles, PDFs, blog posts, podcasts, Wikipedia pages, YouTube videos, and recipes. However, unlike traditional read-it-later apps, Recall uses AI to automatically summarize content, categorize it, and then resurface it when it's related to something new you're looking to learn about. Image Credits:Recall Designed to enhance your ability to remember information, you can review your summaries from your personal knowledge base on a saved spaced repetition schedule. Recall is free to try with support for up to 10 free, AI-generated summaries. After that, you can continue to use Recall as a read-it-later tool, or you can upgrade to a $7 per month plan for unlimited AI summaries and other features. Wallabag is an open source read-it-later app that's also available as a €11 per year hosted subscription, if you prefer. The app itself works across browsers and mobile devices, offers a reader mode for more comfortable reading, and supports importing data from other services like Pocket, Instapaper, and others. Image Credits:Wallabag Open source web app Readeck is designed to help you organize any web content you want to revisit later, whether that's articles, videos, photos, or anything else. You can also use the service to highlight text, export articles to ebook format, save video transcripts, and more. Image Credits:Readeck Readeck works as a browser extension so you can save your bookmarks as you surf the web. Users can host Readeck themselves, but the company says it will offer a hosted version in 2025. It's also developing a mobile app. Obsidian's web clipping service lets you highlight and capture web pages you want to save with just a click on its browser extension. You can also use templates that customize how certain types of web pages are saved. For instance, articles are saved with their citations and footnotes, while recipes will include ingredients, steps, and nutrition. You can even set up custom templates to save from your favorite websites. Image Credits:Obsidian As an open source app, Web Clipper is free to use, allowing you to highlight text, images, and blocks of content for saving into the Obsidian note-taking app. Karakeep's bookmarking app lets you save links, notes, and images, and then uses AI to automatically tag items and make retrieving them faster. The app includes other features like support for lists, bulk actions, dark mode, full-text search, and more. Image Credits:Karakeep The open source app is available on iOS and Android as a browser extension for Chrome and Firefox. You can support its developer here. Dewey is another 'save everything'-style app that lets you save and organize web links, videos, and images, including posts from social media sites like X, TikTok, Bluesky, Threads, Reddit, Instagram, LinkedIn, and others. Image Credits:Dewey The service offers built-in organizational tools like folders and tags, AI bulk tagging, keyboard shortcuts, automatic syncing to Notion, export, a personalized RSS feed, and more. Dewey offers multiple plans, starting at $7.50 per month, which you can choose to pay annually for $30 off. This is not an exhaustive list, and we will keep adding more tools as we discover them.

StackOne Raises $20m Series A led by GV (Google Ventures) to Reinvent SaaS and AI Agent Integrations
StackOne Raises $20m Series A led by GV (Google Ventures) to Reinvent SaaS and AI Agent Integrations

Business Wire

time06-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Wire

StackOne Raises $20m Series A led by GV (Google Ventures) to Reinvent SaaS and AI Agent Integrations

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- StackOne – the next-gen, AI-powered platform fuelling the future of enterprise AI agents and SaaS integrations – has raised $20 million in a Series A round led by GV (Google Ventures). Workday Ventures, XTX Ventures, existing investors Episode 1 and Playfair, and angels from OpenAI, Deepmind, Microsoft and Mulesoft also participated. The funding, which takes the total raised by StackOne to $24 million, will be used to continue building StackOne's state-of-the-art tool-calling LLM, invest in R&D, and further expand the number of integrations and depth of actions available in the StackOne platform. Integrations: From features to table stakes Software platforms live or die by how well they integrate with other tools – whether it's an AI recruitment agent sourcing candidates in Workday; a SaaS security platform raising a ticket on ServiceNow; or an AI HR agent automating onboarding. Integrations are so important, they're now a top priority for 83% of B2B buyers, yet 71% of SaaS firms still take three weeks or more to launch a single connection meaning engineering teams are losing valuable time and resources, and SaaS firms are losing out on contracts. StackOne's founders – Romain Sestier (CEO) and Guillaume Lebedel (CTO) – saw this first-hand during 10+ years of working together at multiple companies, building billion-dollar SaaS products for Google, Oracle and Yieldify. With the rise of AI agents demanding a new kind of integration interface, this challenge is only getting harder and while emerging standards, like Model Context Protocol (MCP), show where the market is heading, they lack the security, depth, and scalability needed for real enterprise use. StackOne solves all of this by reinventing the way integrations are built – combining a proprietary AI agent and real-time engine to give teams the speed, coverage and reliability to finally connect SaaS and AI agents to the enterprise tech stack. AI-first and Enterprise-ready For StackOne, AI isn't just an add-on, it's at the heart of everything it does. Normally, developers spend weeks combing through messy enterprise APIs, writing custom logic just to get a single integration to work. StackOne's proprietary AI agent takes on this heavy lifting. It automatically builds use-cases on top of even the most complex APIs, connecting AI and SaaS tools to their customers' entire tech stack in a fraction of the time, and with higher accuracy than even the most precise, leading LLMs. Through the platform, product teams get access to 3,000+ actions on 200+ connectors instantly, from HR to CRM, ticketing, messaging, and IAM. StackOne's proprietary AI-first, enterprise-ready approach means integrations are secure and up-to-date by default, and all of this frees developers up to focus on core roadmap features and scale without sacrifice. The new generation of future-proofed integrations In this way, StackOne represents an entirely new generation of integration platforms. One that will finally fuel global adoption of enterprise AI Agents, and which is purpose-built to scale with even the largest organisations, while being future-proofed to stay at the forefront of AI's rapid growth. This has seen StackOne become one of the fastest-moving players in the $17.5 billion integration space, having recently surpassed 1 billion API calls, and with customers including Drata, Attensi, Localyze and more across three continents. Compliance leader Drata recently used the platform to rapidly launch 100 integrations, while management development leader Mindtools delivered a Workday integration in record time, securing a major contract. For today and tomorrow StackOne is also building a growing AI developer community, including its own AI Demo Days that bring together researchers, builders, and infrastructure teams, and its own open-source contributions. This is part of StackOne's broader mission to create not just the best integration platform, but the go-to hub for the people building the future of AI-powered software. Romain Sestier, co-founder and CEO, StackOne said: 'For over a decade, Guillaume and I have felt the acute pain of integrations. We'd see teams burn months rebuilding or refusing requests and nothing on the market eased this pain. So we, alongside a super talented and passionate team, built it ourselves. StackOne doesn't just reinvent how integration platforms can and should be built – with depth, accuracy and security by default – but we believe AI agents are the missing piece in finally delivering enterprise-grade integrations at scale. It's the platform we'd always dreamed of, built for the AI future of SaaS, and it's a vision shared by the whole team. This shared experience has shaped a culture of innovation, collaboration and deep care for the product we're building and it shows.' Guillaume Lebedel, co-founder and CTO, StackOne said: 'Integrations are now table stakes for winning and keeping customers in B2B SaaS, especially for the ever-growing swathe of AI agents. You only need to look at the rise of standards like Model Context Protocol (MCP) to see the demand, but these protocols just aren't fit for enterprise use by themselves – they're a small piece of the puzzle. They lack security, accuracy and scale. They don't work with multi-tenant systems, they're too restrictive for the complex needs of big business, and they don't go deep enough. StackOne solves all of this in a single layer; one that marks the birth of a new generation of integrations platform for an AI-first world.' Luna Schmid, Partner at GV: 'What impressed us most about StackOne is its ambition and clarity. Romain and Guillaume aren't building just another SaaS integration platform. They're creating infrastructure that modern software and the entire AI agent ecosystem can rely on. The depth of secure integrations, the pace of delivery, and the team's foresight into AI's future uniquely position StackOne to redefine this category.' Barbry McGann, Managing Director and SVP at Workday Ventures: 'We've been impressed by how quickly and deeply StackOne integrates with complex enterprise systems – and now, with their focus on agent-to-agent interoperability, they're unlocking even more powerful use cases for customers. In a space where speed and scale often trade off with reliability, compliance, and functionality, StackOne delivers all of the above in a universal layer – without compromise.' About StackOne StackOne's integration platform provides SaaS vendors and AI Agent builders with a universal interface for enterprise-grade integrations. The StackOne solution provides platforms with a simple way to connect with B2B SaaS tools. The StackOne API and AI tools provide a real-time interface for interacting with multiple platforms. Its unique real-time architecture enables powerful bi-directional integrations while protecting sensitive data. StackOne includes all that is needed to build, test, ship, and monitor integrations, with best-in-class security and privacy. The company's investors include Google Ventures, Workday Ventures, XTX Ventures, Episode 1, Playfair, as well as the founders of GitHub, Onfido, and Hofy. For more information, please visit:

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