SafetyCulture raises $45.5M Series C funding round
May 21, 2018 | Bobby Burch
SafetyCulture, an Australia-based firm whose North American headquarters is located in Kansas City, announced a huge funding round Monday to advance its tech platform focused on workplace safety.
The tech firm raised a $45.5 million Series C round led by New York investment firm Tiger Global Management. Other investors include previous backers, including Blackbird Ventures, Index Ventures, Morpheus Ventures and Scott Farquhar.
The funding round brings the company’s total raise to $74 million and is its valuation to more than $330 million
The funding will allow the company to accelerate big hiring plans across the globe — including in the U.S. — as well as raise general awareness, said Luke Anear, CEO of SafetyCulture.
“SafetyCulture is expanding at a breakneck pace. In the last year alone, over 100 new staff were hired to support the company’s growth,” Anear said. “However, most of the world doesn’t know we exist; they’ve never heard of SafetyCulture. This funding means that we can continue to build great products, better serve more customers and have a bigger impact on safety and quality for workers all around the world.”
SafetyCulture’s tech tools aim to curb the roughly 5,700 workplace injuries that occur each day on average across the world. SafetyCulture created a variety of mobile tools to help companies digitize safety processes, checks and inspections, as well as improve communication and collect better data.
More than 15,000 construction, hospitality, manufacturing, retail and logistics firms in about 150 countries use SafetyCulture’s platform, the company reports. SafetyCulture staff has spiked from 85 employees in 2017 to 214 employees in 2018 across its offices in Kansas City, Sydney, Townsville, Australia, Manchester and Manila.
SafetyCulture announced in February that it relocated its North American office from San Francisco to Kansas City and that it plans to embark on an ambitious hiring plan in the area. The company plans to quadruple its staff from 15 to 60 people at its Plexpod Westport Commons office in the next year.
The huge Series C round will allow the company to reach its global growth goals, Anear said.
“The North American market currently makes up over 30 percent of our customers, serviced from our U.S. base in Kansas City,” Anear said. “Such a significant injection of capital enables us to invest in the talent and marketing needed to continue to grow as a truly global company. This is an exciting time in SafetyCulture’s history. We have only built one percent of what our customers need. We reached 15,000 companies with minimal sales or marketing, and now it’s time to take SafetyCulture to the rest of the world.”

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Man of unexpected taste: How this Kansas farmer’s sweet pivot grew into a destination winery
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. PAOLA, Kansas — When Mark Allison planted elderberries in 2010 on his 42-acre property in rural Miami County, he didn’t envision making his own wine and opening a tasting room,…
Prospect KC finds new home for its fight against food apartheid; culinary training moves to The Paseo
A new pairing between The Prospect KC and Nourish KC sets the table for transformation within Kansas City’s food deserts, said award-winning Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant, announcing the relocation of her social enterprise and its game-changing culinary training program. The collaboration combines the strengths of both organizations in their fights against hunger, leaders said, with The…
Wallpapered with flyness: She’s adding urban culture to home decor; why this founder is still searching for her tribe in KC
Chicago transplant Keisha Jordan is bringing urban opulence to Kansas City through Complex Flavors Home + Life — just in time for the Kansas City cultural renaissance, she said. Complex Flavors is a home decor brand, offering wallpaper lines that celebrate “city girl” energies, Jordan said, noting urban opulence is the fuel that sits at…
