Clubhouse Software

Clubhouse Software is an American software company that develops project management software for software development teams.[1][2][3]

Clubhouse Software, Inc.
Private
IndustrySoftware
FoundedNew York City
2014 (2014)
Founders
  • Kurt Schrader
  • Andrew Childs
Headquarters,
United States
Products
  • Clubhouse
Number of employees
50
Websiteclubhouse.io

History

Clubhouse Software was founded in 2014 by Kurt Schrader and Andrew Childs, in New York.[4] It was initially founded with the aim of “bringing more transparency and predictive models to the process of software engineering”[5]. After a year in beta, its flagship product, a project management platform called Clubhouse, was launched in 2016.

In December 2017, Clubhouse raised US$10 million in Series A round of funding, led by Battery Ventures[1]. Previous to this, the company had raised US$4 million across two rounds of seed funding from Resolute Ventures, Lerer Hippeau Ventures, BoxGroup, RRE Ventures, and Brooklyn Bridge Ventures[1].

In January 2020, Clubhouse raised US$25 million in Series B round of funding, led by Greylock Partners. The round which included previous investors Battery Ventures and Lerer Hippeau, valued Clubhouse at US$100 million[6].

The company has no relationship with the invitation-only audio-chat app also known as Clubhouse.[7]

Product

Clubhouse

Clubhouse is a commercial software product for project management and issue tracking. It includes features to track and plan user stories, plan software development sprints, visualize work in progress with kanban boards, and report on progress of work[8]. Clubhouse is also free for up to 10 users.[9]

Clubhouse has integrations with Slack, GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket and others. It is available through a web application and apps for iOS and Android

Clubhouse is written in Clojure, with a custom JavaScript front end[10]. Its features can also be accessed using a REST API. The Clubhouse API was noted in 2019 as "one of the most talked about APIs" by ProgrammableWeb.[11]

gollark: If you don't have a political view on some topic, you will not do those due to that.
gollark: People with political views which aren't "I don't have a political view" will probably talk about it, take actions based on it, maybe shun or mock people with sufficiently different ones, sort of thing.
gollark: Perhaps by some technical definition, but not practically.
gollark: Why?
gollark: It's an extreme example which hopefully maybe provides insight into a more realistic case.

References

  1. Crichton, Danny (12 December 2017). "Clubhouse nets $10m Series A from Battery Ventures to make software development fun again". TechCrunch. Archived from the original on 12 December 2017.
  2. Chan, Rosalie (30 October 2018). "Four-year-old startup Clubhouse has a bold new plan to take on Atlassian's mega-popular Jira with a new project management tool". Business Insider. Archived from the original on 30 October 2018.
  3. Rubinstein, David (5 March 2019). "Making project management easier… for developers". SD Times. Archived from the original on 5 March 2019.
  4. Clubhouse Software Archived 2020-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, Crunchbase, accessed 2 July 2020.
  5. Crook, Joran (21 July 2015). "ClubHouse Is Like Salesforce For The Engineering Team". TechCrunch. Archived from the original on 21 July 2015.
  6. Konrad, Alex. "This New York Startup Just Raised $25 Million To Challenge Atlassian". Forbes. Archived from the original on 2020-03-08. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
  7. Constine, Josh (April 18, 2020). "Clubhouse voice chat leads a wave of spontaneous social apps". TechCrunch. Archived from the original on July 8, 2020. Retrieved July 2, 2020. Clubhouse, an audio-based social network [...] Don’t confuse it with the similarly named Clubhouse.io.
  8. "Clubhouse: Product Features". clubhouse.io. Archived from the original on 29 July 2019. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  9. "Clubhouse announces new collaboration tool and free version of its project management platform". TechCrunch. 10 September 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  10. @clubhouse (31 July 2015). "@wycats We're Clojure/Datomic for the backend and a custom Javascript framework (built on top of JQuery) for the front-end" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  11. Culbertson, Joy (26 December 2019). "ProgrammableWeb's Most Clicked, Shared and Talked About APIs of 2019: Business and Productivity". ProgrammableWeb. Archived from the original on 28 December 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
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