Beacon Software, an emerging rival to Toronto consolidation machine Constellation Software, has raised US$225-million to fund a growth plan that leans into arming acquired companies with artificial intelligence tools.
Beacon, which is also based in Toronto, said Tuesday it had raised the funds in a deal led by existing investor General Catalyst and newcomer HarbourVest Partners, and backed by past and new financiers including Canada’s Intrepid Growth Partners.
With the deal – completed in January but only announced this week – the two-year-old company, legally known as Beacon Acquisition Corp., is valued at more than US$1.4-billion including the new money, a source familiar with the matter said. The Globe and Mail is not identifying the source as they are not authorized to discuss the matter.
The funding came just months after Beacon raised US$250-million in a financing that valued the company at US$1-billion including funds raised. That deal was led by General Catalyst, Lightspeed Venture Partners and D1 Capital. With the new deal Beacon has now raised more than US$550-million.
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Beacon was co-founded by chief executive officer Nilam Ganenthiran – a former D1 partner and former president of grocery delivery giant Instacart – and Divya Gupta, former Sequoia Capital partner.
Mr. Ganenthiran, who grew up in Scarborough, was inspired to start Beacon two-and-a-half years ago as the first generation of AI coding agents came to market. He was evaluating an investment opportunity for D1 in an agent company at a time when many of his peers felt generative AI tools and startups would displace existing software companies.
Those fears have weighed on the valuation of Constellation and many other software companies in the past year.
But Mr. Ganenthiran felt that represented a misunderstanding of where the value of software came from, he told Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP technology lawyer Chad Bayne in a video interview last month.
“Software is just a term that we have invented that actually represents an encapsulation of a bunch of business workflows,” Mr. Ganenthiran stated. He said as AI agents become more prevalent, vendor relationships with customers and understanding how they derive value from their software will “hold a lot of value.”
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In another video interview with investor Amar Varma last November, Mr. Ganenthiran described founding Beacon in early 2024 as “very much a gut feel decision as well about where I felt I was going to derive the most personal value and satisfaction.”
The co-founders set out to buy small, self-financed and entrepreneur-led subscription software vendors with at least $1-million in annual revenue and that were either profitable or close to it. Beacon targets companies that have created sustainable mission-critical software for specialized sets of “main street” customers such as campgrounds, concrete makers and youth sports operators, but that are limited in their ability to deploy AI in their offerings. The idea is to buy and hold the companies forever, similar to Constellation and copycats including Montreal-based Valsoft Corp.
Rather than acting as a pure rollup that buys companies and slashes costs, Beacon integrates its acquired companies onto a shared operating platform, deploys its own engineers to improve their code, provides sales leaders to help grow the acquired companies, and embeds financial technology for payment processing, banking and payroll.
It also works with the acquired companies to build and implement AI agents to automate more tasks for their customers.
Beacon’s focus is on using AI to empower businesses to scale more efficiently, Mr. Varma told The Globe and Mail. “It’s proving to be spot-on. Nilam and his team are operating at a constant state of urgency and purpose.”
Beacon has bought 30 companies and now makes about an acquisition a week. Its approach has resulted in 50 per cent-plus growth in operating earnings over the past year, Beacon said in a release Tuesday.
HarbourVest principal Alex Robins said in a statement that Beacon represents a new model for building tech companies. “Nilam and the team are bringing AI to essential businesses that millions rely on every day. From our vantage point investing across private markets, we see a significant opportunity to drive operational improvement in these businesses, and Beacon is well positioned to help them grow and thrive.”
Beacon also said Tuesday it had hired former Instacart chief technology officer Mark Schaaf as chief operating and chief product officer, and Goutham Buchi, formerly with AngelList, as chief technology officer.