For nine years, Diskover played the long game. No spray and pray capital, no sugar high rounds. Just raw execution, heads down engineering, and a product that quietly scaled to organize unstructured data at the kind of volume most platforms can’t even define, let alone index.
Now? The stealth is off.
Diskover just locked in a $7.5 million Seed round led by Park Capital Partners and The Hive, with heavyweight backup from Snowflake Ventures and NetApp. That’s not your cousin’s angel check. That’s a signal, a green light, a bet on a company with 130+ enterprise customers, a patented architecture, and a newfound appetite to build loud.
Big congrats to Founder & CTO Chris Park, the architect behind the open source engine that kicked this all off back in 2016, back when “exabyte scale” sounded like sci fi. Also to CEO Will Hall, who stepped in last year and brought a little more fire to the fight. With previous stints at Cerebras and DataFrameworks, and the scars to prove it, Hall doesn’t do startups for sport. He builds for the boardroom and the battlefield. Same goes for Chief Product Officer Paul Honrud, a metadata OG with two patents and a résumé that runs through Dell EMC and beyond. And Chief Revenue Officer Marianne Zuhorski, thirty years deep in strategic sales and still closing like it’s day one. That team doesn’t blink.
Let’s be clear, Diskover’s not selling dashboards. This is orchestration at exabyte scale. They scan, index, and structure the chaotic sprawl of file and object data across hybrid environments, then surface it with real-time metadata to fuel artificial intelligence, governance, and search. Think NFS, SMB, S3, yes, all of it. That’s not cleanup. That’s control.
They’ve already stitched themselves into the DNA of Dell, NetApp, and Snowflake with Openflow integrations, and just acquired CloudSoda to drop AI agents into the mix. That means intuitive workflows, orchestration without the drag, and a UI that doesn’t look like it was built during the Bush administration.
The play now? Expand engineering, deepen the AI stack, and push harder into the Snowflake Marketplace. More connectors, tighter compliance, and a UI that cuts friction like a hot knife through S3. They’re not selling dreams, they’re shipping infrastructure for the AI decade.
If your enterprise is buried under unstructured chaos, Diskover’s not just an option, it’s the blueprint.

