Open Source Enterprise Company MuleSoft Raises $12 Million From SAP And Others

Leena Rao

Leena Rao is currently a Senior Editor for TechCrunch. She recently finished graduate school at the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, where she studied business journalism and videography. From 2004 to 2007, she helped lead Congresswoman Carloyn Maloney’s community outreach and relations efforts in New York City. She graduated from Columbia University in 2003, where she was... → Learn More

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

MuleSoft, a startup that develops open-source technology integration services, has raised $12 million in Series C funding from SAP Ventures with Bay Partners, Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, Morgenthaler Ventures, and Lightspeed Venture Partners also participating. This funding brings the startup’s total funding to nearly $30 million.

Founded in 2006, MuleSoft, provides software, support, and services for open-source technologies. The company offers Tcat Server, an application server that simplifies management, application provisioning, and diagnostics tasks for Tomcat developers and administrators; Mule ESB, an open source enterprise service bus, which enables to create and integrate application services; and Mule Data Integrator that simplifies data integration and transformation tasks.

The company’s products have seen over 1.5 million downloads and over 2,500 production deployments by clients such as Walmart.com, Nestlé, Honeywell and DHL, as well as 5 of the world’s top 10 banks. Mulesoft faces competition from SnapLogic and others.

Company: MuleSoft
Website: mulesoft.com
Launch Date: June 1, 2006
Funding: $80.5M

MuleSoft provides the most widely used integration platform to connect any application, data service or API, across the cloud and on-premise continuum. As SaaS, mobile and Big Data converge, enterprises face a choice: become overwhelmed by the resulting explosion of endpoints or seize the opportunity to gain competitive advantage. Companies can no longer compete with just the assets, technology and talent within their four walls. In the era of the New Enterprise, companies must combine an explosion of applications,...

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