Swiftype
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Software Information Technology Search Engines |
Genre | Search and index |
Founded | January 2012 |
Headquarters | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Matt Riley (CEO) Quin Hoxie (CTO) |
Products | Site Search App Search Enterprise Search |
Number of employees | 40 |
Parent | Elastic |
Website | www |
Swiftype is a search and index company based in San Francisco, California, that provides search software for organizations, websites, and computer programs. Notable customers include AT&T, Dr. Pepper, Hubspot and TechCrunch.[1]
History
[edit]Swiftype was founded in 2012 by Matt Riley and Quin Hoxie.[2] The company participated in Y Combinator’s incubator program and received investment from a number of prominent sources.[3] Their site search uses semantic understanding of queries to differentiate the meaning of words based on their use.
In September 2013, Swiftype obtained Series A funding from New Enterprise Associates (NEA).[4] In March 2015, Swiftype raised an additional $13 million in Series B funding led by NEA for a total of $20 million in funding.[5] They used some of these funds to expand into areas outside of site search, especially for knowledge bases, customer support and e-commerce.
Swiftype's site search can be used for faceted search, full text search, real-time search, and concept search queries. The company's plans offer on-demand and live recrawls and indexing of websites. Other features include drag and drop result customization, real-time analytics and adjustable weights.[6]
In an effort to further grow outside of site search, Swiftype introduced an enterprise search service in February 2017. It aimed to help organizations find their data across different services like G Suite, Office 365, Dropbox, Zendesk and more.[7] It also offers an API for searching custom data sources. Swiftype also introduced an artificial intelligence that interprets the queries and builds an "enterprise knowledge graph" from the data it accesses.
Swiftype was acquired by Elastic in November 2017.[8] Elastic powers Elasticsearch, a tool Swiftype had previously used to index and store their search content.[1] While the acquisition didn't provide any drastic changes, they did set a new introductory price and work to incorporate some of Elastic's search features into their Enterprise Search.[9]
In May 2018, Swiftype introduced Elastic App Search Service, a new search product for developers.[10]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Elastic acquires search startup Swiftype". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2018-10-11.
- ^ Ha, Anthony. "Y Combinator-Backed Swiftype Builds Site Search That Doesn’t Suck", TechCrunch, 8 May 2012.
- ^ Casserly, Meghan. " Site Search (Should Be) Sexy: How Swiftype Raised $1.7M In Seed Funding From SV Bigwigs", ‘’Forbes’’, 15 August 2013.
- ^ Grant, Rebecca. " Swiftype closes $7.5M in less time than it takes to break a habit", ‘’VentureBeat’’, 27, September 2013
- ^ Ha, Anthony. "Swiftype Raises $13M More For Its Smarter Site And App Search“, TechCrunch, 5 March 2015
- ^ Gannes, Liz. " Swiftype Raises $1.7M for Smarter Site Search", ‘’AllThingsD’’, 15 August 2013.
- ^ Ha, Anthony. "Swiftype launches a new product to help companies search across Dropbox, Office, G Suite and more", TechCrunch, 9 February 2017
- ^ "What's Behind the Elastic-Swiftype Acquisition". CMSWire.com. Retrieved 2018-10-11.
- ^ "Tech Giant Acquires Elastic: New Introductory Pricing and Enhanced Enterprise Search Features Announced". Farbentour (in German). Retrieved 2023-04-13.
- ^ "App Search is Now Generally Available", Elastic, 16 May 2018.
External links
[edit]- Search engine software
- American companies established in 2012
- Companies based in San Francisco
- Internet search engines
- Software companies based in California
- Y Combinator companies
- Semantic Web
- Online companies of the United States
- Defunct software companies of the United States
- 2012 establishments in California