A mapping startup based in Missoula, Mont., which allows users to download sophisticated offline topographic maps outlining public and private lands and a number of other features geared towards hunting, fishing and camping, has pulled in its first major outside funding.
onX has closed a $20.3 million Series A round led by Summit Partners. Bessemer Venture Partners, Millennium Technology Value Partners, Next Frontier Capital and NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke also participated in the round. The company is calling the fundraise one of the biggest ever among startups based in Montana.
The company’s founder and CEO Eric Siegfried, an avid outdoorsman himself, had created a more basic program to integrate these maps with his own Garmin GPS. After finding his friends were interested in having a product like this too, he put down $27k of his personal funds into the venture and turned his wife’s scrap-booking room into an HQ of sorts, copying the software he’d written to microSD cards and laser-printing labels. A big application of the Missoula, Montana-based startup’s technology has been in enabling users to track the boundaries of public and private lands while creating custom maps with other information grouped into “layers” for when they’re hunting, fishing or hiking. The company’s central product for desktop, mobile and Garmin GPS devices is an app called onX Hunt, which the startup says is used by “millions of hunters” though onX CTO/COO Joshua Spitzer notes that “almost zero percent of users use the product just for hunting.”
New York on Tech is helping under-resourced students become future tech leaders Jessica Santana and…
Canada is North America’s up-and-coming startup center They say that nice guys finish last —…
Colombia Is One Of Latin America’s Most Promising New Tech Hubs Ten years ago, the…
With 3X The Active Users From A Year Ago, Skout Launches A Feature For Traveling…
Your Next Passport Could Be On The Blockchain A blockchain tinkerer named Chris Ellis has…
Social Travel: Rediscovering the Friendly Skies Editor’s note: TechCrunch contributor Semil Shah is an entrepreneur…
This website uses cookies.