StratusGrid gets $3 million to turn cloud insights into actual fixes
Cloud infrastructure startup StratusGrid has closed a $3 million seed round, its first outside capital since the company started operating. Dogwood Ventures led the round, with Market Square Ventures, LaunchTN, VentureSouth, Service Provider Capital, and a group of angel investors also participating.
The company built itself on customer revenue before taking outside money, which shapes how it thinks about the problem it is solving. The problem, broadly, is that most cloud optimization tools stop at telling organizations what is wrong. They produce dashboards, flag inefficiencies, and surface recommendations. What they do not do is help teams act on any of it safely, get the right approvals in place, execute changes, and verify the results afterward. StratusGrid is trying to close that gap.
Cloud environments have grown harder to manage over the past few years, partly because AI workloads add infrastructure demands that compound on top of existing complexity. As a result, many engineering teams find themselves sitting on a backlog of known inefficiencies they cannot get to because higher-priority product work keeps pulling attention away. The optimization work gets deferred, the cloud bill keeps climbing, and the gap between what teams know and what they actually fix keeps widening.
StratusGrid’s platform, called Stratusphere, handles the workflow layer that most tools skip. It identifies opportunities specific to each customer’s environment, routes changes through approval processes, supports execution, and confirms whether the expected savings or performance improvements actually materialized. For private equity-backed software companies in particular, that sequence matters because cost reduction needs to produce verifiable results, not just projected ones.
Chris Hurst, CEO of StratusGrid, noted that the company built its approach around staying close to customers and working through real infrastructure problems rather than building toward a fundraise. “This round reflects the trust our customers have placed in us and the work our team has done to turn complex cloud challenges into measurable outcomes,” he said.
Jeremy Scardino, CPO of StratusGrid, framed the product direction around execution rather than insight. “Visibility is important, but visibility alone is not enough,” he said, adding that the harder challenge is turning insights into safe, approved, measurable action without pulling engineers away from higher-priority work.
The new funding will support further development of Stratusphere and expand the company’s reach into larger AWS and Azure environments.

