Wales has more than its fair share of budding entrepreneurs and thrusting start-up companies. It’s testimony to the aspiration of young and old alike to be their own bosses, and the extraordinary capacity for innovation that can be seen in towns, cities and countryside across our land.

In celebration of this phenomenon, we’ve brought together a list of 35 such businesses that we think are going places and are companies to watch.

As always this list is by no means definitive and there are plenty of other businesses we could have included and which you may think deserve to be listed here.

So take this list as a snapshot, a glimpse into the extraordinary world of business talent that is Wales' start-up community.

1 Riversimple Movement

Chris Evans with Riversimple founder Hugo Spowers and Rasa hydrogen car

Arguably one of the most innovative companies in Wales, Riversimple has been working for years developing its breakthrough Rasa ‘network electric’ car powered by a small hydrogen fuel cell in the boot.

The team, led by Hugo Spowers, set out to rethink not just the way we power cars, but the way we build and acquire them. The Rasa is as lightweight as it can be, its chassis a carbon fibre monocoque weighing just 40kg.

Four electric motors, one in each wheel, drive the car and they also act as brakes, recovering 50% of the kinetic energy when braking. That is then passed back to the motors through supercapacitors to provide power for acceleration. The car has a range of 300 miles and the prototype clocked over 60mph.

But Riversimple also wants to change the way we view cars as possessions, They aim to provide a mobility service not a product, with customers paying a monthly fee which covers car rental, maintenance, fuel and insurance.

The company plans a 12-month beta trial of 20 pre-production cars this year with the production models coming to market in 2018.

2 Doopoll

Sam Goudie, Steve Dimmick, Marc Thomas of Doopoll

Formed in 2015, Doopoll last year took the Sir Michael Moritz Tech Start-Up Award at the EstNet Awards.

Doopoll was founded by Marc Thomas, Steve Dimmick and Sam Goudie, with the aim of opening up the decision making process to a wider audience by removing the barriers to inclusive and honest feedback.

Its technology effectively allows the views of people to be heard, whether customers, employees or TV audiences, with online polls which can been analysed immediately.

Doopoll believe consensus facilitates change and that valuable information is lost for many reasons, whether that is a matter of engagement, accessibility, technology, or hierarchy.

The platform, which went through global beta testing last year, is available on any device and uses anonymous voting and live feedback. Users can react fast, rewording or adding new questions which emerge or deleting unnecessary ones.

3 Bad Wolf

Formed in 2015 by former BBC executives Jane Tranter and Julie Gardiner, production firm Bad Wolf is bringing the filming of a major new drama based on Philip Pullman’s fantasy trilogy of novels His Dark Materials to Wales and is confident the project can inject £100m into the Welsh economy.

The company is also working with US cable company HBO on an adaption of Bernard Cornwell’s trilogy the Warlord Chronicles, which is a revisionist take on the legend of King Arthur. The plan is for the project to be filmed almost exclusively in Wales, both in terms of studios and locations.

To accommodate its productions and attract more international productions to Wales, Bad Wolf is in the process of acquiring a new studio facility in Cardiff Bay.

Tranter and Gardner have good pedigree, having been responsible for bringing hits such as Doctor Who, Torchwood, and Da Vinci’s Demons - all of which were filmed in Wales - to the screen. They are confident of securing a steady stream of projects into Wales over the next decade.

4 Diurnal

Bridging Skills Gap P11 Student Looking at Chemicals

Cardiff-based Diurnal is a specialty pharmaceutical business targeting patient needs in chronic endocrine diseases.

It has achieved major milestones for its drug therapy products, anticpating market authorisation for paediatric product Infacort from the European Medicines Agency later this year. It plans to market Infacort itself in major European territories, thereby retaining the full commercial value of the product.

Its lead product Chronocort has been granted orphan drug designation by the US Food and Drug Administration and Diurnal recently signed a marketing and distribution agreement for the commercialisation of both products with Israel’s leading commercial group for niche healthcare products.

Diurnal launched on AIM in December 2015 and in its latest full year results announced significant progress towards becoming a revenue generating company.

5 TrakCel

Founded in 2012, TrakCel has developed technology that allows the safe and visible management and control of cell, gene and immunotherapies from clinical trials through to commercial scale on a global basis.

Last year it won a £315,000 European investment to take part in a cell therapy project to help treat cancer, and last summer it announced that it was to double its workforce after a new funding round.

It successfully completed a rights issue after a series of significant contract wins in the US, allowing it to further boost its technology platform and accelerate expansion plans in North America.

It plans to grow its workforce to 50 this year.

6 Wealthify

Michelle Pearce, director, Wealthify

The financial technology sector is poised for huge growth, and robo-investment firm Wealthify ticks all the right boxes.

One of the co-founders is managing director of ActiveQuote.com, Dr Richard Theo, the other is experienced chartered wealth manager Michelle Pearce.

Wealthify’s online technology requires no investment knowlege and is targeted at people who want to invest anything from £1 to £2m.

It uses a combination of algorithms and an investment team to build basic portfolios ranging from the cautious to the adventurous.

Its portfolios came through the economic uncertainties of the last year well and each of the five outperformed its benchmark average between February 2016 and February 2017.

7 Parasol Media

Max Boyce's World Cup Warm Up

Parasol Media was founded in 2012 by Chris Cadenne, Carolyn Hitt and Sian G Lloyd – three women with extensive television and radio production experience.

The Cardiff-based independent is best known for producing “television’s toughest quiz” – the cerebral BBC2 show Only Connect, presented by Victoria Coren Mitchell.

Other ratings hits have included Max Boyce’s Big Birthday, Max Boyce’s World Cup Warm Up and Rhod Gilbert’s Work Experience.

The company also has a diverse portfolio of radio production including arts documentaries, a food series, history programmes and political comedy. Subjects treated in the past year include The Secret Life of Welsh Food, Lloyd George and his Women, Deconstructing Dahl and Andrew Davies at 80.

8 Zip World

Zip safari with Zip World
Zip safari with Zip World

Since opening the world’s fastest zip wire at Penrhyn Quarry in 2013, adrenaline activity firm Zip World has established itself as one of the top tourist attractions in north Wales.

It operates a number of sites around Snowdonia, with thrills including Europe’s longest zip wire, 100 mph zips, the highest treetop wires in the world and Europe’s longest net walkway, which winds through 250 metres of beautiful Welsh woodland.

There’s also underground adventure Bounce Below, with giant nets and slides the height of two double decker buses, a kilometre long rollercoaster and Skyride, Europe’s highest giant swing.

Boss Sean Taylor wants a presence all around the globe within a decade. Next step is a Zip World at the Celtic Manor Resort with a zip wire potentially a mile long taking users across the River Usk at Caerleon at close to 100mph.

9 Brighter Foods

Brighter Foods production line in Tywyn

Former Halo Foods chief executive Robin Williams set up Brighter Foods at the former Halo site in Tywyn, Gwynedd in 2014.

His aim was to create and manufacture healthier snacks within niche areas such as gluten free and diet or nutritionally controlled food. The company can produce more than two million snack bars a year at its specially designed manufacturing base sandwiched between the mountains of Snowdonia and the beaches of Mid Wales.

The firm achieved £2.7m in sales in its first year of trading and provided 37 people with full-time employment. Since then, turnover has increased to more than £10m and, having just commissioned its second production line, Brighter now employs over 150 people.

Last year Brighter launched its own brand, Wild Trail, which has gained a Tesco listing. It has also co-invested in a brand called BOKA, the first mainstream ‘all green traffic light’ snack brand which includes patented food technology.

10 Nudjed

Warren Fauvel, founder and CEO Nudjed

Nujded is a tech startup specialising in health and wellbeing. It engages individuals with tailored content via web, email, SMS and app-based interaction.

It aims to help people manage their health through making healthy choices based on a holistic approach to wellbeing and encouraging people to make the changes they want to make, and uses an algorithm to connect data about different aspects of an individual’s behaviour and desires and convert it into actionable insights.

Since being founded in April 2013 it’s benefited from funding from a number of sources including the Welsh Government’s Welsh Tech Seed Fund.

Last summer it raised £350,000 in a joint investment from hybrid investment and advisory firm Pragmatica and Finance Wales. The money will be used to demonstrate the company’s scalability and develop new areas of research.

11 Learnium

The Learnium team

Cardiff-based start-up education technology company Learnium was formed by a team of graduates from the Alacrity Foundation.

They received an investment totalling £250,000 from the Foundation backers which enabled them to develop their education-specific social network, designed to improve the student experience and enable effective online collaboration.

The social platform allows student and teachers to link up online, collaborate on projects and documents and share digital resources. The platform is available to all UK universities and colleges and doubled its user base during the first six months of 2016.

Learnium has been boosted after being invited to partner its learning engagement online platform with Microsoft.

Learnium will now see its technology integrated with Microsoft Online Office. Both companies have now made their combined product available for free to more than four million students in the UK.

12 Veeqo

Matt Warren of Veeqo

Based in Swansea Veeqo is an in-one inventory, orders and shipping management sytem to ecommerce businesses.

Founded in 2013 by ecommerce veteran Matt Warren, Veeqo has been backed by investors including New Look founder Tom Singh.

It has run a series of successful crowdfunding campaigns, having already raised more than £1.4m through the Seedrs platform, and is seeking to raise a further £1m through the same source.

The Veeqo team has grown from a headcount of one to 30 over the past two years and the new investment round will be used to further grow the team and improve its software, with 75 new jobs planned over the next three years.

Having delivered 504% growth of its monthly recurring revenue over the past 12 months, Veeqo’s next objectives are to further dominate the UK market and expand into the US.

13 DevOpsGuys

James Smith, co-founder of DevOpsGuys

DevOpsGuys was set up in 2013 by the current managers James Smith and Stephen Thair after the pair saw an opening in the market to build an IT development and operations (DevOps) business from the bottom up.

The company exceeded its initial target of hiring 40 employees over 24 months and now has more than 70 staff members and consultants.

Its main customers are government departments and blue chip clients including Admiral, Asos, BAE Systems, Defra, Nokia, Fitness First, Waitrose and Travelodge. It recently won a new contract with the DVLA worth £10m over the next two years.

The Cardiff-based firm is targeting £100m turnover over the next five years following an investment from Santander Corporate & Commercial. It recently won an award for Creative and Digital Start-up of the Year at the Wales Start-Up awards.

14 Perpetual V2G Systems

Andy Ling, managing director of Perpetual V2G Systems
Andy Ling, managing director of Perpetual V2G Systems

Founded in 2013, green tech company Perpetual is already reducing the carbon footprint of companies such as Sainsbury’s.

It harnesses lithium ion cell technology to provide zero carbon power in a variety of off-grid and mobile power settings, ranging from carbon reduction systems for use in supermarket delivery vans through to critical onboard power supplies in emergency vehicles.

Lithium ion batteries provide more power, greater efficiency and have a longer lifetime. Perpetual’s LPS systems are more powerful and provide more energy for high consumption than traditional lead batteries.

The batteries can also be used to provide remote power without the need for generators, and for off-grid power storage and temporary power in both domestic and commercial buildings.

Last year Perpetual secured a £500,000 equity investment from Finance Wales. It won Green Start-up of the Year at the Wales Start-up Awards, and was identified as One to Watch at the Wales Green Energy Awards.

15 Proton Partners International

Artist's impression of the cancer treatment clinic being developed by Proton Partners International at Newport which will be called The Rutherford Cancer Centre

Meditech company Proton Partners is building the UK’s first specialist cancer treatment centres to offer high energy proton beam therapy.

Work on the first of the centres at Newport began last year, and others are being built at Reading and Bomarsund, Northumberland.

The centres will be named Rutherford Cancer Centres in honour of the scientist Ernest Rutherford who identified and named the proton in 2011.

The Newport centre is nearing completion and will offer chemotherapy, radiotherapy and imaging via the latest planning and treatment technologies. Treatment will be available to medically insured private patients, self-paying patients and patients referred by the NHS.

The company was formed following discussions between Professor Karol Sikora, former head of the World Health Organisation’s cancer programme, Sir Chris Evans, the leading life sciences entrepreneur, and Neil Woodford, founding partner of Woodford Investment Management. Institutional and private investors have committed to almost £100m equity finance in the company.

16 Amplyfi

Chris Ganje CEO of Amplyfi with Mark Woods CTO
Chris Ganje CEO of Amplyfi with Mark Woods CTO

This Cardiff-based start-up was created to deliver business insights into possible technology or market disruptions by commercialising military grade artificial intelligence techniques initially developed for cyber surveillance.

The company’s flagship product, DataVoyant, is capable of scanning all open surface and deep web sources across every modern language, automatically interrogating, distilling and presenting underlying trends within hours using its proprietary and innovative technology.

A pilot programme, which included some of the world’s largest companies, was highly successful and demonstrated DataVoyant’s commercial viability across aerospace and defence, banking, energy, insurance, private equity, pharma and professional services sectors.

Following that success Amplyfi now has a strong pipeline of customers and is refining DataVoyant with feedback that has been provided by early adaptors.

17 Cellnovo

Cellnovo launches diabetes management system in the UK

An innovative medical technology company specialising in diabetes, Cellnovo has developed and marketed the world’s first wirelessly connected, all-in-one diabetes management system based on a wearable micro pump for continuous insulin delivery designed to help make life easier for patients.

Its breakthrough technology comprises three parts: an innovative patch pump that allows highly accurate and automatic insulin delivery; a sleek handheld device with an integrated blood glucose meter, food library and activity monitor; and an online platform where data from the device is sent securely, wirelessly and in real time.

The technology inside Cellnovo’s micro pump is state-of-the-art, using a unique wax actuator that pumps insulin with the highest level of accuracy and precision.

18 Delio

Gareth Lewis, Delio Wealth

Delio creates and delivers private asset platforms for some of the world’s leading financial institutions.

It was born out of the changing needs of today’s wealth creators who are increasingly looking to invest directly in opportunities across private equity and debt, social impact and real estate; both direct and via funds. Previously, the offerings of financial institutions were not evolving to accommodate this shift in needs.

Headquartered in Cardiff, and with offices in London and Brussels, Delio is using technology to enable financial institutions to appeal to the next generation of high net wealth investors, launching new offerings that make private banks, wealth managers, professional services firms, angel networks and family offices relevant to their clients again.

Launched in February 2015, it has customers across the UK, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and Australia.

Delio is growing exponentially, working with notable brands and is on course to create 30 jobs in the next 18 months.

19 Paperclip

Paperclip is a location-based item trading app available to download for free on Android and iOS
Paperclip is a location-based item trading app available to download for free on Android and iOS

Founded by Imperial College London graduates Rich Woolley from Penarth and Alan Small, along with their friend and current London student Ziad Al-Ziadi, technology start up Paperclip has developed an app that allows users to buy, sell, swap and give away second-hand goods with nearby Paperclip users.

The team first pitched their idea for the app at the 2014 London Start-up Weekend, later appearing on Dave’s crowdfunding TV show Moneypit where they secured initial investment.

The app went live for Apple and Android devices in October 2015 and now has thousands of active users across the UK.

Last year Paperclip secured a six figure equity co-investment deal with Finance Wales and a syndicate of Turkish investors led by Emre Fadillioglu.

20 Smart Polish Pro

Smart Polish Pro chemically engineers waterless car cleaning formulas, aiming to change the way cars are traditionally washed and waxed through its environmentally conscious products.

Launched in 2015 on a shoestring budget, Smart Polish Pro has grown organically through social media over a relatively short period of time. It boasts a loyal, global fan base of dedicated motorists with almost 100,000 followers who regularly interact and engage with the brand to show off their remarkable results.

Headquartered in Cardiff, it has secured substantial financial backing from high-level investors with the goal of gaining a permanent foothold in the car aftercare market. It currently ships to 55 countries with distribution networks in the Middle East, Chile and Mexico.

21 Luminous Media

Martin Downes and Dan Hughes, co-directors of Torfaen-based media company Luminous Media

This Valleys media company took a step into the world of Hollywood glamour by producing a video advert for a new perfume named after iconic film star Marilyn Monroe.

Luminous Media, based in Torfaen, was approached to produce the motion graphic video for the new fragrance called How to Marry a Millionaire.

The opportunity to produce the video came after Twentieth Century Fox Consumer Products developed a new collection based on the portfolio of 12 Hollywood film titles featuring Marilyn Monroe.

Bristol-based fragrance specialist Designer Fragrances launched the How to Marry a Millionaire inspired women’s fragrance and gift sets in stores across Europe.

Luminous Media is the creation of Martin Downes and co-director Dan Hughes and has worked on campaigns for a number of high profile international brands as well as Beach Rugby Wales, Wales’ largest beach rugby festival, and Silence Racing.

In the charity sector it has worked on campaigns for Age Cymru in west Wales, Carers Trust Wales, the Dads Can project by Monmouthshire Housing, and Sight Cymru.

22 What’s It Like?

A Swansea-based company that specialises in helping businesses leverage video to market and promote themselves, What’s It Like? was launched in 2012 by entrepreneur and technology lecturer Paul Davies when he moved back to Swansea after 12 years working in blue chip corporates nationally.

It’s gone from strength to strength in recent years as the business world has increasingly understood the importance of mobile technology and embraced it. The advent of higher speed connections has also been critical to its growth.

It recently launched a smart phone loyalty scheme which operates via the What’s It Like? app, allowing individual businesses to launch reward schemes or offers without the outlay and practical difficulties of having to get cards printed or creating other promotional materials.

It now has more than 300 clients spread across Wales from Tenby to Cardiff across a wide range of sectors, including bars, restaurants, gyms, interiors and retail centres including Morgan Arcade and the Capitol Centre.

23 Cactus Options

Formerly known as Q-Opt.com, Cactus Options is a company that wants to increase the number of students who go on to study A-levels, based around the simple idea of allowing students to take the subjects that they want to learn.

Typically, schools split their A-level subjects into columns and students are then asked to select one subject from each column.

But the choices available for each student are dependent on how these columns are formed, resulting in students selecting weaker subjects, moving schools or dropping out of education altogether.

Cactus Options solves this problem using its own specialised algorithms. Data on prospective A-level students’ preferred subjects is sent to Q-Opt, which provide an optimised solution that maximises the number of students whose preferred choices are met.

A trial at Bishop of Llandaff Church in Wales High School resulted in sixth form pupil numbers increasing by 32%, bringing in thousands of pounds of additional revenue for the school.

24 Thaw Technology

Video Loading

Founded by entrepreneurs Nick Tulp and Rhydian Hoddinott, Thaw Technology began trading this year and within three months had already won the highest subscribed Innovate UK competition ever with their invention the Use By Mate, which has now partnered them with Tesco and the food waste charity WRAP.

The invention informs customers of the expiration dates of the products they have in their home, delivering notifications direct to their phones and also providing menu suggestions.

25 Lexington Corporate Advisors

Lexington Corporate Advisors team left to right: John Tose (associate), Alex Ross (research analyst), Andy Morris (director), Gary (managing director), Thomas Edwards (manager).

One of Wales’ fastest growing corporate advisory firms, Lexington Corporate Advisors was recently acquired in a management buy-out.

Having advised on £25m worth of business transactions in its first year of trading, the deal provides an exit for co-founder Nigel Greenaway, who will now focus on his law firm Greenaway Scott.

In its maiden year in 2016 the firm acted on several significant deals, including the multi-million pound MBO of building and refurbishment contractor A&N Lewis, as well as the sale of the acquired brain injury (ABI) care specialist NewBridges to TracsCare.

The team was boosted last autumn with Andrew Morris joining as a director from UK Steel Enterprise. And a strong new business pipeline for 2017 has prompted the additional recruitment last month of Thomas Edwards, a transactions specialist with accountants Broomfield & Alexander, as a manager.

The firm is also moving into the centre of Cardiff at new offices in Windsor Place.

26 Solar Buddies

Solar Buddies

Solar Buddies is a child-friendly, mess-free sunscreen applicator invented by two mumpreneurs from Cwmbran.

Kelli Aspland and Laura Griffin, who between them have seven children, devised Solar Buddies after expressing concerns about how their children were protecting themselves against the sun during school hours.

They also knew that some schools had no touch policies and wanted to come up with a solution to allow children to apply sunscreen independently.

The roll-on applicator also allows teachers to apply cream to children’s skin without violating school rules banning physical contact with pupils.

The Solar Buddies are now being sold online, around the world and in JoJo Maman Bebe stores in the UK.

27 Quote Detective

A pair of Cwmbran-based serial entrepreneurs are celebrating a £1.7m turnover in insurance premiums in the first year of their new business.

David Harlow and Stephen Peck started Quote Detective in February 2016 to provide an insurance broker service to specialist sectors of the motor industry.

The business partners, who have a back ground working within management and IT in the insurance sector, previously created the company Quote Exchange, supplying price comparison software to industry leaders.

They sold that company for £3.2m in 2011 and, identifying a gap in the market for specialist motor insurance, started Quote Detective in early 2016 with a skeleton staff of three.

In just a year the business has grown to 13 employees and the rapid expansion has not gone unnoticed, with Quote Detective recently making the shortlist for two categories in the Business Growth Awards South Wales 2017.

28 Signum Health

Signum Health’s CEO Victoria Norman with Dr Marina Arulanandam of Llandaff Surgery and Phillip Barnes of Finance Wales.

Signum Health is a digital referral platform for medical professionals, healthcare providers and the public.

It is the brainchild of primary care and public health manager Victoria Norman, who has worked in the industry for 15 years and has first-hand experience of how a system like Signum Health can help patients while saving the NHS money.

During its start-up stage, Signum Health acquired a sophisticated online diagnostic tool which was developed at the University Hospital Wales Cardiff.

It has already been used by medical practitioners around the UK to remotely diagnose a range of skin conditions and allergies.

It can also diagnose 17 other conditions remotely and has the potential to scale quickly.

The company recently secured a six-figure equity co-investment from Finance Wales and four angel investors.

29 LittleMe Teepee

Janine Payne started LittleMe Teepee to be able to work and care for her daughter Vivienne

After her daughter was diagnosed with hip dysplasia, Janine Payne left her job and started her own business to ensure she would be able care for her and still work.

Three years later the company has sold close to 2,000 of its children’s play teepees, handcrafted in a studio in Cardiff and made by a small team.

LittleMe has tapped into a craze for teepees aimed at kids bedrooms and nurseries. And while Janine believes teepees are here to stay, she is looking at new products and there are plans to introduce beanbags and toy storage this year.

She also wants to introduce childrenswear and accessories, inspired by a trip to Laos and Myanmar last summer.

The company has made a lot of sales through online marketplaces such as Etsy but recently launched its own website.

30 Stockomendation

Paul Roberts of Stockomendation

Llandudno’s Stockomendation has calculated the big stock market winners of the year when it comes to picking savvy investments.

The firm was created by entrepreneur Paul Roberts in a Llandudno tech hub after a dud share tip saw him lose a significant sum of money.

It ranks the performance of researchers and analysts, helping investors decide who to follow and who to avoid.

The company was recently named one of the top fintech companies to watch in Europe.

31 Hoowla

Many experts in the property industry criticise the conveyancing process, with more and more pressure being added to make it more transparent. Other issues include solicitors having less time to work on each case.

Hoowla believes that transferring the process online fixes the problems, and that’s exactly what it’s done.

Sporting an easy-to-use website, all parties involved in a house purchase are able to keep up-to-date with the property transaction.

And it’s gone beyond conveyancing, adding family law, wills and probate, personal injury and more to the type of cases that can be supported through its case management software.

32 Recruit Packs

Rich Brady, founder of Recruit Packs, at a Small Business Saturday event in Cardiff

Recruit Packs is a family run business that is dedicated to ensuring that the men and women starting the first phase of service training are prepared.

Since 2013 the Denbigh-based firm has supplied more than 2,000 British Army, Royal Air Force and Royal Navy recruits, saving them time and a great deal of hassle.

The packs are designed for anyone joining the Royal Navy, the British Army, the Royal Air Force, Royal Marines and Cadets and are based on the official kit lists issued by MoD. They include everything from sewing kits and boot polish to Casio watches recommended by soldiers.

33 EchoSec

Ben Milson of Eschosec

Echosec gives people the power to search through social media based on location. The results of each search helps to paint a picture of events as they are unfolding.

In less than a second their service is capable of contacting all of the services they tap into, aggregating and normalising their response, scanning for alerts and priority keywords and forwarding notifications directly to its users. The composite results are also live streamed to its connected end users.

34 ProfitSourcery.com

Ed Brooks of ProfitSourcery

ProfitSourcery.com, based at start-up hub Welsh ICE in Caerphilly, won the title of Global Start-Up of the Year title at the Welsh Start-up Awards.

It helps Amazon sellers find stock which will make them profits, helping them to make smarter decisions on what to invest in.

The company, which launched in 2015, has a six-figure turnover and analyses two million retail products per month and compares them to Amazon’s prices.

It employs four full-time coders and has hundreds of customers, half of whom are in the USA.

35 TestLodge

TestLodge is a cloud-based software testing tool that enables its users to document and manage their testing efforts with ease


TestLodge is a cloud-based software testing tool that enables its users to document and manage their testing efforts with ease.

It’s primarily used by start-ups, internal IT departments, product and design agencies and quality assurance teams looking for an easy-to-use programme to test the functionality of their software.

The Penarth-based company currently supports thousands of users across more than 180 countries and is widely regarded as one of the top emerging software testing tools to come out of the UK.