Neon is capturing developer mindshare from the bottom up and has a real chance to become the default serverless Postgres database-ultimately displacing Oracle and other legacy databases in the world’s biggest enterprises. Developers are particularly excited for Neon’s unlimited branching capability, which brings the CI/CD workflows they love into the database world, and its lightning-fast startup time that gets new databases and branches up and running in under two seconds. Since Neon launched in June, more than 5,000 developers have already signed up for the waitlist to access it, and it has exploded in popularity on GitHub. The real way to tell if a developer platform is a hit is simply to see if developers are using it and with Neon, all signs point to a continued surge in adoption. Neon empowers developers with global reach, performance at the edge, and an optimal user experience. Neon’s serverless platform solves this bottleneck problem, leveraging Postgres to bring the best of modern front-end software development workflows to the database world. Developers create nimble apps and websites, but then struggle to connect them to legacy databases. On the front end, several such tools are already widely used, but on the back end, databases are often stuck in the old world of proprietary frameworks hosted on servers. Developers want collaborative, scalable platforms that help them quickly build and deploy applications, and these solutions are often open source, serverless, and API-based. With so much competition for their services, developers are in the driver’s seat, and they want to use tools that make their lives easier and their code better. It used to be that mostly tech companies hired large development teams, but now nearly every company must build and integrate software into the very fabric of their businesses. Companies in every sector-from finance and healthcare to manufacturing, transportation, and retail-are hiring legions of developers, trying to build killer apps to get ahead. Why does the world need Neon right now? Because application development is changing before our eyes. Listen to Nikita share the story behind building Neon on Glenn's podcast, Founder Real Talk. Nikita is already building a wider developer-focused team with deep engineering, product, and go-to-market experience. Nikita’s co-founders, Stas Kelvich and Heikki Linnakangas, have been key contributors to Postgres. His 20-year career includes being co-founder, CTO, CEO, and Chief Strategy Officer at SingleStore, a database for complex analytical and transactional workloads that he grew to over a $1B valuation, as well as stints as a database engineer at Microsoft and Facebook. CEO Nikita Shamgunov is well-known for building amazing database products. And the founders of Neon are a dream team. Neon’s technology is impressive, but we don’t just invest in products-we invest in people. Neon separates the storage and compute functions to create a truly affordable and compelling cloud native Postgres, the popular open-source database. That’s why GGV is so excited to be leading a $30M Series A1 investment in Neon, the world’s first truly serverless, multi-cloud, open-source database. Existing databases aren’t built cloud native and won’t scale to match the needs of modern, serverless web apps and websites. However, up to this point, they’ve lacked the back-end platforms to match this innovation. On the front end, developers have moved en masse to serverless deployment and hosting platforms such as Vercel* and Netlify. As a result, developers everywhere prefer flexible open source and API platforms that make it faster and easier to build and deploy top-quality applications. Now that “every company is a technology company,” software development has become a high-stakes, winner-takes-all game.
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