In today's article we are going to delve into the fascinating world of Datadog. Whether you are an expert in the field or simply curious to learn more about it, this article will provide you with relevant and provocative information about Datadog. From its origin to its impact today, we will explore all angles of this exciting topic. Prepare to embark on a journey of discovery and learning that will leave you with a new perspective on Datadog.
Company type | Public |
---|---|
| |
Industry | System Monitoring |
Founded | 2010 | , in New York City
Founders |
|
Headquarters | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | |
Products | Datadog |
Revenue | US$2.13 billion (2023) |
US$−33 million (2023) | |
US$48.6 million (2023) | |
Total assets | US$3.94 billion (2023) |
Total equity | US$2.03 billion (2023) |
Number of employees | 5,200 (2023) |
Website | datadoghq |
Footnotes / references |
Datadog, Inc. provides an observability and security SaaS platform for cloud applications. The platform helps corporations monitor servers, databases, software tools, and infrastructure services.
Datadog's platform consolidates comprehensive traces, metrics, and logs to enable full observability of applications, infrastructure, and third-party services. These functionalities assist businesses in safeguarding their systems, preventing disruptions, and ensuring an excellent user experience.
Datadog was founded in 2010 by Olivier Pomel and Alexis Lê-Quôc, who met while working at Wireless Generation. After Wireless Generation was acquired by NewsCorp, the two set out to create a product that could reduce the friction they experienced between developer and systems administration teams, who were often working at cross-purposes.
They built Datadog to be a cloud infrastructure monitoring service, with a dashboard, alerting, and visualizations of metrics. As cloud adoption increased, Datadog grew rapidly and expanded its product offering to cover service providers including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, Red Hat OpenShift, VMware, and OpenStack.
In 2015, Datadog announced the acquisition of Mortar Data, bringing on its team and adding its data and analytics capabilities to Datadog's platform. That year, Datadog also opened a research and development office in Paris.
In 2016, Datadog moved its New York City headquarters to a full floor of the New York Times Building to support its growing team, which doubled over the course of the year. Datadog announced the beta-release of Application Performance Monitoring in 2016, offering for the first time a full-stack monitoring solution. As of 2017, the company has close to 300 employees, the vast majority of which are located in the US (with offices in Manhattan, Boston, and Baltimore) and a new R&D facility in Paris.
In 2017, Datadog acquired the Paris-based Logmatic.io, a platform-agnostic service for querying and visualizing logs to monitor and troubleshoot online services. In 2019, Madumbo, an AI-based application testing platform, joined Datadog.
In 2019, Datadog established a Japanese subsidiary in Tokyo with enterprise technology veteran, Akiyoshi Kunimoto, as Country Manager for Japan.
In February 2022, Datadog acquired CoScreen, a video collaboration tool.
In August 2022, Datadog acquired Seekret, an API observability company.
In November 2022, it was announced Datadog had acquired the New York-based visualization service for cloud and system architects, Cloudcraft, for an undisclosed sum.
Datadog uses a Go-based agent, rewritten from scratch since its major version 6.0.0 released on February 28, 2018. It was formerly Python-based, forked from the original created in 2009 by David Mytton for Server Density (previously called Boxed Ice). Its backend is built using a number of open and closed source technologies including D3, Apache Cassandra, Kafka, PostgreSQL, etc.
In 2014, Datadog support was broadened to multiple cloud service providers including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, and Red Hat OpenShift. Today, the company supports over 600 integrations.
In 2010, Datadog launched with a seed round, with participation by NYC Seed, Contour Venture Partners, IA Ventures, Jerry Neumann and Alex Payne, among others. In 2012, it raised a $6.2 million Series A round co-led by Index Ventures and RTP Ventures. In 2014, Datadog raised a $15 million Series B round led by OpenView Venture Partners, followed by a $31 million Series C round led by Index Ventures in 2015. Datadog opened 2016 with a $94.5 million Series D round led by ICONIQ Capital, one of the largest funding rounds for a New York City company during that year.
Datadog went public on the Nasdaq exchange on September 19, 2019, selling 24 million shares and raising $648 million.
Datadog was listed in Forbes' Cloud 100 and was ranked in the top ten fastest growing companies in North America in Deloitte's 2016 Fast 500 List. In both 2015 and 2016, Crain's named Datadog to its list of the 100 Best Places to Work in New York City. Datadog was also listed on Wealthfront's 2017 Career-Launching Companies List and Business Insider's 51 enterprise startups to bet your career on in 2017. BuiltIn named it Boston's 5th top company to work for in 2019.
Here, the five SeedStart companies (DataDog, Introspectr, Lexeem, Reducify, and Risktail) debuted to over 100 venture capitalists, angel investors, and strategics from the New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. areas.
Last year, support was broadened to multiple cloud service providers, including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, and Red Hat OpenShift, and the company added OpenStack support as well. As of today, Datadog integrates monitoring and web operations data from almost 100 commonly used technologies in modern cloud applications.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)