Democracy & Politics

Pushing the Boundaries of Political and Nonprofit Technology

Today we announced a $6.3M funding round (€5.5M) that closed a few months ago, with partners who share our mission: building the infrastructure for people-powered organizations.

Flow Barre
Co-Founder & CEO of Qomon

Paris, Washington D.C.


Today we announced a $6.3M funding round (€5.5M) that closed a few months ago.

The round was led by Asterion Ventures, Ternel, Better Angle and Good Only Ventures (Surfrider Foundation, Fondation GoodPlanet, Croix-Rouge Française, Handicap International) - partners who share our mission: building the infrastructure for people-powered organizations. All are impact funds and, uniquely, include nonprofit-led investing structures. Mission-driven organizations - like us, and like many of you.

Too many nonprofits and political groups still rely on outdated tools - spreadsheets, CRMs never designed for them, scattered messaging apps - while trying to mobilize volunteers at scale.

We’re changing that.

Like Stripe did for payments, Qomon simplifies the operational backbone of organizing: secure, modular, easy-to-use technology that lets organizations focus on action, not admin.

In just 4 years, we bootstrapped Qomon to support 500+ organizations across 70 countries. These new partners allow us to scale even faster: doubling users (because the more users we’re able to serve, the better the product becomes), doubling actions, and giving mission-driven teams full control over their data and operations - online and in the field.

The infrastructure for people-powered movements is being built. And we’re building it together with you.

Thank you for your trust.

Flow & the Qomon Team

Flow Barre
Co-Founder & CEO of Qomon
Share with friends

Frequently Asked Questions

Still have questions?
Contact our experts

Why do nonprofits and political organizations need modern technology infrastructure?

Too many mission-driven organizations still rely on spreadsheets, scattered messaging apps, and tools never designed for organizing. Modern infrastructure provides secure, modular technology that lets teams focus on action rather than administration while mobilizing volunteers at scale.

How is Qomon different from traditional tools used by nonprofits?

Qomon provides purpose-built infrastructure for People-Powered Movements rather than repurposing generic business tools. It simplifies the operational backbone of organizing with secure, modular technology designed for field operations. Book a Qomon demo to see the Go-To Action Platform in action.

What does impact investing mean for nonprofit technology?

Impact investing brings mission-aligned capital to technology companies serving nonprofits and political organizations. When investors include nonprofit-led structures, they ensure the technology stays focused on empowering organizers rather than extracting value from them.

How can organizations maintain control of their data while scaling operations?

Choose platforms that give your team full ownership of supporter data and field operations. Modular, secure technology ensures data stays with your organization as you grow across regions. Schedule a Qomon demo to discover how Volunteer Mobilizing scales across 70 countries.

What challenges do mission-driven organizations face with outdated technology?

Outdated tools create fragmented workflows where supporter data lives in disconnected spreadsheets and messaging apps. This wastes volunteer time on administration, limits Field Actions coordination, and prevents organizations from mobilizing effectively at the scale their mission demands.