See further coverage here:
Praetura Ventures Invests £1m In Digital Performance And Security Platform Business (Yorkshire Times)
Fund injects £1m into tech business (The Business Desk)
Praetura backs technology firm with £1m investment (North West Insider)
Leeds tech company secures £1million investment (Prolific North)
Praetura Ventures, the VC fund that targets high-value sectors in the North of England, is investing £1m in a tech company that helps businesses defend themselves against customer-focused cyberattacks and improve the digital experience their websites offer to consumers.
The funding secured by Leeds-based RapidSpike will allow it to enhance and scale its product and expand its client base to add to its stable of blue-chip customers that includes William Hill, Npower and major US brand retailer Helen of Troy (owner of Revlon, Braun and Honeywell among others).
RapidSpike’s platform monitors websites from a consumer interface, helping to provide insights to improve functionality and overall performance such as identifying slow-loading pages and real user journey activity. It also includes a feature that detects cyberattacks in which data such as customer payment details and personal information are targeted.
The platform is popular with consumer-facing businesses such as online retailers and ticketing companies. RapidSpike has almost 300 customers, with a third of revenues generated outside the UK, including from customers in the US, Japan and South America.
The business has been boosted by a global spike in website traffic following Covid-19 lockdowns, with consumers increasing the amount of time and money they spend online. Nasdaq has predicted that 95% of transactions will take place online by 2040.
RapidSpike was founded in 2015 by Andrew Mason and Robin Hill, and the business is now led by CEO Gav Winter, the founder of IT consultancy The Test People. He joined in 2018 to drive the company’s growth. All members of the senior management team have previous experience of successfully building and exiting tech businesses.
The £1m investment by Manchester-based Praetura Ventures was led by Guy Weaver and Sim Singh-Landa.
RapidSpike CEO Gav Winter said: “The online retail market has been supercharged this year, sharpening the focus on both customer experience and security. Today’s online consumers are sophisticated and have high expectations of transactional websites, meaning companies must ensure an outstanding user experience. At the same time cybersecurity threats are increasing all the time and businesses are recognising that they must invest to protect themselves and their customers.
“The team at Praetura Ventures have proved that they understand our business and our market. Their funding and the experience and expertise they bring to the table will allow RapidSpike to continue to improve our suite of products and grow our blue-chip client base.”
Sim Singh-Landa, investment manager at Praetura Ventures, added: “RapidSpike is one of the most exciting young businesses in the North’s tech scene, with a unique platform that allows businesses to build safe, reliable and secure ecommerce websites. We have all seen the huge financial and reputational impact cyber breaches can have on businesses. RapidSpike is well-placed to support the growth in ecommerce and help to protect against the rise of cybercrime and particularly the Magecart threat.
“We’re confident that the investment, along with the value our knowledge and experience add, will help RapidSpike to become one of the world’s leading tech companies specialising in website performance and security at a time when there is huge demand for these services.”
3volution (for RapidSpike) and Gateley (for Praetura Ventures) provided legal advice on the transaction. PMSI provided commercial due diligence and Beyond MA provided technical due diligence to Praetura Ventures.
Praetura Ventures has invested in 13 businesses in the past 18 months, including investments into AI and machine learning business Peak and online delivery platform Sorted.
Last year the VC fund led a £1.5m investment into XR Games, the Leeds-based independent games studio and VR developer.