Viola invested $14 million in Candis without ever meeting in person
Viola Ventures partner Omry Ben-David agreed to invest in a company relying only on Zoom calls due to Covid-19
CANDIS plans to use the raised capital to continue the development of its machine learning technology and focus on expansion into European markets. The company never met anyone from Viola in person, and instead secured the funding entirely on Zoom meetings.
“We operate this ‘New Operational Model,’ where we continue to do our due diligence—the meetings with the founders, the references, the industry checks, everything else—and we do it over Zoom. If we reach the conclusion that we want to invest, we even sign the documents via Zoom,” explained Omry Ben-David, a partner at Viola Ventures.
While Zoom might not provide some of the interpersonal relations that are expected between entrepreneurs and venture capital firms, Ben-David feels the process was “90% the same” as in-person investments.
The investment in CANDIS also marks the first time that Viola Ventures has invested in a European company. “They’re based in Berlin, and the idea here is to expand into what we see as the very lucrative opportunity in Central Europe, in terms of a whole ocean of new services and products which are pretty normal in the U.S. and maybe the U.K. but not Europe,” Ben-David explains. “You need to have a DNA that is local, that knows the market best, and knows how to operate in the market.”
- aMoon’s second healthtech fund tops out at $750 million
- What U.S. investment trends mean for Israeli tech companies
- VC funds are engaging in a high stake poker game with Israel’s tech sector
Founded in 2015 by Christopher Becker and Christian Ritosek, CANDIS’ series A round was in 2018 and the company has since grown by more than 500%. CANDIS’ software can automate more than 80% of all classic accounting processes and facilitates collaborations with tax firms across Europe. It does this by automating manual bookkeeping, accounting processes and B2B payments for mid-market companies with machine learning.
“Our machine-learning based technology disrupts a whole industry, in which the majority of tasks are still very manual,” says Christian Ritosek, co-founder and managing director of CANDIS in a statement. “The pattern recognition engine automates accounting workflows and empowers companies with real-time data and insights to make better financial decisions.”
Viola Ventures is the early-stage arm of Viola, Israel’s tech-focused investment group. It was founded in 2000 and has backed unicorns such as Payoneer, ironSource, and Lightricks.