Automattic acquires relationship manager Clay to add an identity layer to online tools



After acquiring universal messaging apps Beeper and Texts.com, WordPress.com owner Automattic has added another communication-focused startup to its lineup: relationship-management app Clay.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Clay had so far raised over $9 million in venture capital from investors like General Catalyst and Forerunner Ventures. The tool will continue to be supported and will later be integrated with other Automattic products, like Beeper.

Clay’s software, launched in 2021, is something of a smarter address book or personal CRM, letting users organize the people they know and keep up with their latest updates by pulling in data from services like LinkedIn, Facebook, WhatsApp and X, as well as address books and calendars.

Image Credits:Clay

You can use the app to keep up with things you want to know about people, like job changes, relocations, updated bios, recent social posts, and more. Clay also lets you add notes to address book entries, so you can note how and when you met, or the names of their kids, for instance. A timeline for each entry shows when notes were added, the last time you reached out, and other times you engaged.

The app later built in AI, adding an AI helper called Nexus that lets you ask questions about your network, like who you know at a particular company, or who you should connect with when visiting New York. Beyond that, the AI bot is meant to integrate with your daily workflow.

As part of the acquisition, which closed last week, Clay’s small team, including its co-founders Zachary Hamed and Matthew Achariam, is joining Automattic.

“Our mission […] is to help with relationships and increase conscientiousness,” Achariam said. “That’s always been our North Star, and all the features […] reinforce that by bringing these different aspects of relationship management into one platform and one tool.”

Image Credits:Clay

Automattic said it made sense to buy Clay because of its ability to be integrated into the company’s broader ecosystem, which today includes the universal chat app Beeper (a merger of the Texts.com and Beeper acquisitions).

Clay’s founders, meanwhile, have a sense of a shared mission with Automattic, and appreciate that they’ll get to continue to develop their app. (Often, smart address book startups are eaten up by their acquirer and then sadly wound down.)

“We are very excited about the longevity aspect of this,” said Hamed. “We believe that this should be something that exists beyond, like, any one company,” he added.

For Clay, the long-term plan at Automattic includes integrating with Beeper, and ultimately becoming an identity layer for a variety of different tools.

Those plans are not finalized, however, nor could Automattic commit to a time frame for that progress. It also wouldn’t share if Clay’s pricing is due to change in the future. Currently, the service is a freemium offering, with its paid plans starting at $10 per month, or $40 per seat, per month for teams.

Clay’s founders said they believe their values are similar to Automattic’s, which is why the deal made sense.

“One of their main ethos is this idea of open source, and the idea that that’s one of the most powerful forces of our lifetimes. And we tend to agree,” said Achariam.

Clay’s team is also interested in integrating with other open technologies going forward, like ActivityPub, used by Mastodon, and AT Protocol, used by Bluesky.

Clay didn’t share any numbers about its userbase, but it did say that its app manages over 150 million relationships. The app is available on macOS, Windows, iOS, and web.




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