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§ Private Profile · San Francisco, CA, USA
STRATIM is a company.
STRATIM has raised $36.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Key people at STRATIM.
STRATIM has raised $36.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
STRATIM develops an enterprise logistics platform to modernize fleet operations and unify disparate systems. Its comprehensive software suite provides tools for overseeing entire logistical processes, ensuring high vehicle uptime and streamlining workflows for transportation companies. Its technical approach creates a unified, data-driven environment for efficient fleet management.
The company was founded in 2014 as Zirx by CEO Sean Behr. Behr's initial insight stemmed from optimizing on-demand services, evolving into addressing broader challenges within fleet logistics. This vision guided development of a seamless operational backbone, leveraging technology to transform extensive vehicle fleet management.
STRATIM's platform serves transportation and logistics companies managing significant vehicle fleets, enabling enhanced operational efficiency and reduced complexities. Its vision centers on transforming how businesses manage mobile assets, providing intelligent tools ensuring operational continuity and responsiveness for modern commerce.
Key people at STRATIM.
STRATIM has raised $36.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $30.0M STRATIM Systems - Series B in April 2015.
STRATIM has raised $36.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
STRATIM's investors include Bessemer Venture Partners, 01 Advisors, 10100, 7BC Venture Capital, 8VC, Alumni Ventures, Antler, Asylum Ventures, Balderton Capital, Adeyemi Ajao, Base10 Partners, Canvas Ventures.
Stratim Capital is a San Francisco-based private equity firm founded in 2004, specializing in secondary transactions to provide liquidity to early shareholders, founders, and employees of venture-backed companies.[1][2][3] Its investment philosophy centers on acquiring illiquid private equity positions—such as venture capital, buyout, and growth/expansion stakes—directly from existing investors, offering tax-efficient diversification and cash returns in any market environment.[1][3][5] The firm targets sectors like enterprise software, SaaS, big data, investment management, and technology, media, and telecom (TMT), with a portfolio including notable exits like MongoDB, MarkLogic, and Jobvite.[2] Stratim has facilitated over 100 investments with original capital exceeding $400 million, typically in deals ranging from $10-50 million, and impacts the startup ecosystem by enabling liquidity for stakeholders without relying on IPOs or tender offers, supporting founder retention and employee wealth creation.[2][3]
Stratim Capital was established in 2004 in San Francisco as a venture capital and private equity player focused on secondary direct transactions.[2][3][5] Key details on founding partners are not specified in available sources, but the firm's principals have driven its evolution from general VC activities to a specialized secondary market leader.[1][2] Over two decades, Stratim shifted emphasis toward providing liquidity alternatives amid growing private market durations, completing around 15 investments with 10 exits, peaking in activity around 2014 and notable deals like EverQuote in 2016.[2] This backstory reflects adaptation to prolonged venture cycles, where secondary sales became essential for investor diversification.[3]
Stratim Capital rides the trend of extended private market timelines, where startups delay IPOs amid volatile public markets, heightening demand for secondary liquidity.[3] Timing aligns with post-2008 venture maturation, as firms like Stratim fill gaps left by traditional LPs, with activity peaking in 2014-2019 during high-valuation private booms.[2] Market forces favoring it include rising secondary transaction volumes (projected to grow with $2T+ in dry powder) and regulatory tailwinds for employee liquidity programs.[1][5] Stratim influences the ecosystem by stabilizing founder and employee incentives, reducing sell-pressure on primaries, and recycling capital into new ventures, particularly in SaaS and enterprise software where hold periods average 7+ years.[2]
Stratim Capital is poised to expand as secondary markets scale to $100B+ annually, driven by mega-fund secondaries and AI-fueled private valuations extending hold times.[2][3] Upcoming trends like embedded liquidity platforms and LP portfolio rebalancing will amplify its role, potentially doubling deal flow amid 2026's anticipated rate stabilization. Its influence may evolve toward structuring larger, structured secondaries for late-stage unicorns, solidifying its niche in a fragmented liquidity landscape—echoing its 20-year mission of turning illiquid holdings into actionable wealth.[1][3]