Syndio CEO Maria Colacurcio. (GeekWire File Photo / Dan DeLong)

In its quest to help companies treat all employees fairly, Seattle-based Syndio has raised $50 million in new funding, the startup announced Monday.

The Series C round was led by Emerson Collective and Bessemer Venture Partners, with additional investments from Voyager Capital. Syndio raised $17.1 million in January and has raised $83 million to date.

Update, March 15, 2022: Syndio announced more investors in the round, including Operator Collective; the Chicago Sky’s Candace Parker; Alexi Robichaux, CEO and co-founder of BetterUp; Anita Lynch, chief data officer at New Relic; Rachel Romer Carlson, CEO and co-founder of Guild Education; Spencer Rascoff’s 75 & Sunny; and Cap Table Coalition. Firms Concrete Rose and Next Play Capital invested in the company for the second time.

Syndio’s data-science powered software is used by companies to analyze and resolve pay equity issues due to gender, race or other comparisons, and to provide strategies for fixing those disparities. The startup has grown to 80 employees and doubled its revenue each of the past two years. Its platform is now used by 200 companies, including Salesforce, Nordstrom, General Mills, Nerdwallet and others.

CEO Maria Colacurcio told GeekWire that employers’ focus on pay equity has evolved beyond just gender.

“The conversation is really changing and becoming more inclusive and comprehensive, as it should have always been, quite frankly,” Colacurcio said. “As a platform, we are the leader in this. And one of the reasons why is because we started doing this in 2017, before this had become such a macro issue and a cultural phenomenon.”

According to Syndio, customer use cases have shifted since the murder of George Floyd in May 2020. Before that event sparked a national reckoning on race in the U.S., only 50% of Syndio customers analyzed race. Today, 98% analyze both gender and race.

Colacurcio said employees are choosing where they work based on the commitment shown by CEOs and companies to pay fairness and workplace equity.

“The cost of ignoring these internal and external forces are clear: loss in brand power, increase in capital costs through employee attrition and inefficiency, and a collapse in morale,” she said. “For the first time in history, technology exists to meet this moment and make workplace equity a foundational leadership principle.”

Workplace dynamics have also shifted during the COVID-19 pandemic. The rise of remote and hybrid work creates another equity element that companies want to track — especially as it relates to whether days in or out of the office are impacted by gender, race, etc.

“It’s not unlawful to get promoted more frequently if you’re in the office, that’s the product of proximity bias and that’s not unlawful,” Colacurcio said. “But we have a lot of clients that are proactively wanting to make sure they’re tracking ahead of that to make sure when you slice that data by gender, race or ethnicity, they’re not creating issues.”

Syndio was founded by data scientist and law professor Zev Eigen in 2017. Colacurcio, who previously co-founded the workplace collaboration company Smartsheet, joined Syndio in 2018. The company won GeekWire’s Elevator Pitch competition in 2019.

Colacurcio said success shown in the early days of the startup, and the broadening beyond just pay equity gave investors the confidence to double down.

“They saw the proof that, ‘wow, these guys aren’t just a one hit wonder,'” she said.

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