Cloud

Open source backend-as-a-service provider Appwrite raises $10M


The Transform Technology Summits start October 13th with Low-Code/No Code: Enabling Enterprise Agility. Register now!


Let the OSS Enterprise newsletter guide your open source journey! Sign up here.

The burgeoning backend-as-a-service (BaaS) market has ushered in a handful of young upstarts that are leveraging open source to disrupt the big BaaS incumbents such as Google’s Firebase. And investors have taken note — just a few weeks back Supabase secured $30 million while back in April Nhost secured a $3 million investment.

The latest open source “Firebase alternative” to attract investors’ attentions is Appwrite, a two-year-old Israeli BaaS company which today announced it has raised $10 million across two recent seed rounds.

Flexible

BaaS, in a nutshell, allows companies and developers to forget all about the infrastructure and put all their spadework into the front end. The ultimate appeal of open source in the BaaS space is that businesses aren’t locked into any specific ecosystem, and can move the service to any production or development infrastructure host that they wish.

Appwrite is an entirely self-hosted solution, packaged as Docker microservices for web or mobile app development, and includes user authentication, file storage, a database for storing and querying data, API management, security and privacy, and more.

Above: Appwrite

Founder and CEO Eldad Fux built Appwrite from scratch and open-sourced the project back in October 2019. A year later, he formally founded the company and recruited the project’s core maintainers from the open source community as full-time employees. For now, Appwrite remains an entirely free, self-hosted solution available on GitHub, though plans are afoot for a commercial cloud offering later this year, allowing developers to “onboard Appwrite” more quickly.

“Our team is currently focused on making our open source solution the best possible and ensuring we continue to build a vibrant and exciting OSS community,” Fux told VentureBeat. “We believe that backend-as-a-service is one of the most interesting markets out there. Together with our OSS community, we believe we can build new innovative business models without hindering our open source offering, like other OSS companies are sometimes forced to do.”

Given that Appwrite is still technically in beta, its main target focus has been individual developers, though Fux notes that these include members from major companies including Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Alibaba, IBM, Cisco, and more.

While Firebase has emerged as one of the leading players in the BaaS space since Google acquired the company back in 2014, prior to that the startup had raised some $7 million from investors including Flybridge Capital Partners — so it seems somewhat fitting that Flybridge is now investing in Appwrite too eight years later. Other Appwrite investors include Bessemer Venture Partners, Ibex Investors, and Seed Camp, alongside angel backers such as Elastic cofounder Uri Boness and Heroki cofounder James Lindenbaum.

Growth market

The global BaaS market was pegged as a $1.6 billion industry in 2020, a figure that’s predicted to grow to nearly $8 billion within six years. So what’s driving demand, exactly? According to Fux, it all boils down to removing complexity from developers’ everyday lives — the very same developers who are increasingly driving purchasing decisions in companies.

“There are just too many tools, frameworks and services that developers need to master,” Fux said. “For example, cloud providers have done a great job abstracting the hassle that was required in managing infrastructure. Still, they created a new level of complexity for developers who need to master endless services that don’t play well with each other. This problem is becoming worse every day. Therefore, abstraction layers like backend-as-a-service are a must if we want to enable developers to focus on innovation rather than on boilerplate and puzzling solutions together.”

Although Appwrite has clear competition in the open source BaaS space, Fux touts the company’s 40,000-strong community of developers building, using, and engaging with other members as an indicator of its strength among rivals.

“Growing as an open source project has been a huge factor in our success — building out in the open with a community of maintainers, advocates, and users who believe in our vision acts as a growth multiplier for us,” Fux noted. “The Appwrite community acts as a ‘secret sauce’ that always points our team and product in the right direction.”

But is there room for so many open source Firebase alternatives, or will it ultimately be winner-takes-all?

“As both a developer myself, and an insider looking at the recent growth in developer interest in BaaS solutions, it’s very clear that this won’t be a single-winner market,” Fux said. “But there will be a developer favorite, and we believe Appwrite is already in a strong position there and poised to grow even more.”

VentureBeat

VentureBeat’s mission is to be a digital town square for technical decision-makers to gain knowledge about transformative technology and transact.

Our site delivers essential information on data technologies and strategies to guide you as you lead your organizations. We invite you to become a member of our community, to access:

  • up-to-date information on the subjects of interest to you
  • our newsletters
  • gated thought-leader content and discounted access to our prized events, such as Transform 2021: Learn More
  • networking features, and more

Become a member



READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.