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§ Private Profile · San Francisco, CA, USA
Swrve is a technology company.
Swrve delivers an enterprise platform for mobile marketing automation and customer engagement. It analyzes extensive behavioral data, offering deep insights into individual users to orchestrate personalized, real-time contextual experiences. This facilitates dynamic user segmentation and targeted campaign delivery, enabling brands to build relevant connections across all digital touchpoints.
Established in 2007, Swrve was founded on the insight that mobile engagement demanded a data-driven approach beyond basic notifications. Founder Tornike Onashvili recognized this, leading development of technology to anticipate user behaviors. This intelligent interaction approach became central before its acquisition by MessageGears, which integrated specialized mobile expertise.
The platform serves large enterprises optimizing digital brand building and customer experience. Swrve's solutions enhance user loyalty and guide behaviors through tailored interactions. Its vision centers on empowering brands to deeply understand every user, foresee their needs, and respond with personalized, contextual communications, fostering enduring relationships.
Swrve has raised $129.9M across 9 funding rounds.
Swrve has raised $129.9M in total across 9 funding rounds.
Swrve has raised $129.9M across 9 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $25.0M Series D in September 2017.
Swrve has raised $129.9M in total across 9 funding rounds.
Swrve's investors include David Lam, Atlantic Bridge University Fund, Primitive Ventures, Promus Ventures, True Ventures, Marco DeMiroz, Fergal McAleavey, Acero Capital, Brian Long, Evolution Media Partners, Ireland Strategic Investment Fund, Better Food Ventures.
Swrve is a SaaS technology company that develops a cloud-based customer engagement platform focused on mobile marketing automation.[1][2][5] It enables businesses to improve marketing through AI-driven behavioral targeting, audience segmentation, real-time personalization, and multi-channel campaigns like push notifications, in-app messaging, SMS, and email, primarily serving enterprise mobile app companies to boost user retention, engagement, and monetization.[1][2][3][4] The platform solves the problem of generic marketing by analyzing user behavior, device attributes, geolocation, and predictive propensities to deliver timely, contextual interactions that anticipate user needs.[1][2]
Founded in 2010 and headquartered in San Francisco with over 200 employees, Swrve positioned itself as a leader in mobile marketing, integrating with tools like Twilio and Tableau, though it has since been rebranded and acquired by MessageGears, enhancing its focus on real-time mobile app experiences.[5][6]
Swrve was founded in 2010 in San Francisco, emerging during the early boom in mobile apps when companies needed specialized tools to engage users beyond traditional web marketing.[2][5] The leadership team consisted of experts in consumer marketing, marketing automation, e-commerce, and technology, driven by a vision to help businesses "know every user, anticipate their needs, and interact in that moment."[2] Early traction came from targeting leading mobile enterprises, extending native mobile capabilities to existing marketing stacks, and gaining recognition like Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Mobile Marketing Platforms in 2018.[2] The company expanded globally with offices in Dublin and London, growing to over 200 employees while emphasizing a high-performance culture of hard work, community giving, and direct expert support.[2][5][7]
Swrve rode the explosion of mobile apps in the 2010s, capitalizing on the shift from desktop to smartphone-first user experiences where real-time, contextual engagement became essential for retention amid app store saturation.[2][5] Its timing aligned with rising AI and machine learning adoption in martech, enabling predictive personalization when batch-and-blast emails fell short for mobile audiences.[1] Market forces like data privacy regulations and cookieless tracking amplified demand for in-app, first-party data solutions, positioning Swrve favorably against broader marketing automation tools.[1][3] By influencing enterprise mobile strategies and partnering with analytics leaders, it helped shape the ecosystem toward integrated, user-centric mobile martech, now evolving under MessageGears amid unified customer data platforms.[6]
Swrve's acquisition and rebranding to MessageGears signals a pivot toward deeper in-app personalization and real-time insights, likely accelerating growth in a post-iOS privacy world where app-owned data drives engagement.[6] Trends like AI advancements, Web3 monetization, and cross-platform experiences will shape its path, potentially expanding to emerging channels like AR/VR apps. Its influence may grow by powering hyper-relevant mobile commerce for giants, solidifying its legacy from mobile marketing pioneer to indispensable engagement engine—much like how it first transformed generic campaigns into anticipatory conversations.[2][6]