Dataiku

 Dataiku is an AI and machine learning company which was founded in 2013 and has grown exponentially since. In December 2019, Dataiku announced that CapitalG - the late-stage growth venture capital fund financed by Alphabet Inc. - joined Dataiku as an investor and that it had achieved unicorn status, valued at $1.4 billion. Dataiku currently employs more than 500 people worldwide between offices in New York, Paris, London, Munich, Sydney, Singapore, and Dubai.

Dataiku
TypePrivate
IndustryComputer software
FoundedFebruary 14, 2013; 7 years ago in ParisFrance
FounderFlorian Douetteau, Clément Stenac, Marc Batty, Thomas Cabrol
Headquarters
New York City
United States
ProductsDataiku Data Science Studio
RevenueIncrease $100 Million (2020)
Number of employees
600 (2020)
Websitewww.dataiku.com

HistoryEdit

Dataiku was founded in 2013 by Florian Douetteau, Clément Stenac, Thomas Cabrol and Marc Batty.[1]

In 2015, Dataiku established itself in the United States.

In December 2018, Dataiku announced a $101 million Series C funding round[2] led by ICONIQ Capital. In September 2019, the company was included in the Forbes Cloud 100, a ranking of the top 100 private cloud companies in the world.

In December 2019, one day after releasing Dataiku 6, Dataiku announced that CapitalG - the late-stage growth venture capital fund financed by Alphabet Inc.- joined the company as an investor and that Dataiku had achieved unicorn status, valued at $1.4 billion.[3]

In August 2020, Dataiku announced an additional $100 million Series D funding round,[4] led by Stripes and Tiger Global Management. The company did not disclose its new valuation, but said that it was “still a unicorn”.

ProductsEdit

The software Dataiku Data Science Studio (DSS) was announced in 2014, supporting predictive modelling to build business applications.[5] Later versions of DSS also included other features.[6]

Dataiku offers a free edition and enterprise versions with additional features, such as multi-user collaboration or real-time scoring.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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