Platforms to connect apps that wouldnβt normally talk to each other have been around for a minute (see: Zapier). But they have not gotten dramatically simpler to use if youβre nontechnical. Generative AI has lowered the barrier to entry somewhat. However, getting the most out of these platforms β and fixing things when they break β still requires a bit of programming know-how.
Software developers Sam Brashears and Edward Frazer perceived this to be the case as well. During internships at tech giants like Meta and Stripe, they struggled to get automations working using some of the more popular app-linking tools.
βIβd been dealing with the pain of designing integrations and automations from scratch,β Frazer said in an interview. βAnd Sam believed that generative AI models would solve the biggest problem in integrations β transforming data between APIs.β
So Brashears and Frazer, longtime friends whoβd been building software together since elementary school, decided to try their hands at a streamlined, easy-to-use app-to-app integration platform.
DryMerge is the fruit of their work. A chatbot for building workflows, DryMerge lets you describe an automation you want between apps β for instance, βWhenever I get an email from a new prospect, ping the team on Slack and add them to HubSpotβ β and handles the necessary technical scaffolding.
βCurrently, IT departments use complicated no-code tools to automate workflows on behalf of non-IT teams,β Frazer said. βA natural language interface opens up automation to nontechnical people.β
It sounded like a neat idea, a chatbot that can string apps together for you β particularly if you, like me, have spent countless hours wrestling with IFTTT. So, I decided to give DryMerge a go, hoping to replace my old and rickety automations once and for all.
DryMergeβs UI is quite clean and minimalist. It reminds me a bit of ChatGPT; thereβs not much to look at besides a text bot. Each new request (e.g., βText me a summary of my calendar meetings every morningβ) starts a new chat session, and these sessions can be revisited at any time from a list on the left-side panel.
DryMerge hooks into an expanding library of apps, including Gmail, Microsoft Outlook, Salesforce, storage services like Dropbox and OneDrive, social media platforms (e.g., X), and messaging clients (e.g., Discord). Once the platform creates an automation with these, it plops that automation into a dedicated window showing when the automation last run and whether DryMerge encountered any errors.
I tried setting up a few automations I thought might be useful for a reporter with an overfull schedule, like one to throw Gmail contacts into a spreadsheet and add dates from recent email invitations to a Google Calendar. Things started out promising β DryMerge had me log into the relevant apps and asked whether Iβd like to test the automations to ensure everything was working properly.
But then, problems started to crop up.
Several times, DryMergeβs chatbot stopped responding altogether. Other times, it missed key details in a request. I tried repeatedly to get DryMerge to understand that I wanted to copy Gmail contacts to my Google Calendar, but every attempt, it thought I wanted to manually enter contacts into a spreadsheet.
The setbacks didnβt completely ruin my DryMerge experience. Giving credit where itβs due, the platformβs nifty when it works. For example, I successfully got DryMerge to set up an automation that copies posts from my X account to the personal Discord server I use to aggregate various notifications. A niche use case? Perhaps. But itβs going to save this reporter a lot of task switching.
The bugs, Frazer assures me, will be addressed in time. He and Brashears are DryMergeβs only employees, so thereβs lots on the to-do list.
βWe think weβre well-positioned to iterate quickly and nimbly,β Frazer said.
Assuming Frazer and Brashears can get DryMergeβs platform in good working condition, the bigger challenge the duo will have to face is staying relevant in the fiercely competitive integration-platform-as-a-service (iPaaS) space. According to recentΒ pollΒ released by IDG and TeamDynamix, iPaaS is one of the fastest-growing software markets, projected to reach $2.7 billion this year.
AWS has its own iPaaS called AppFabric. IBM recently acquired iPaaS tech from Software AG. A growing number of startups aside from DryMerge are attempting to break into the segment, while incumbents like Zapier and IFTTT are aggressively deploying generative AI capabilities.
Frazer makes the case that DryMergeβs differentiator is β and will remain β βbeing 10x easier to useβ than drag-and-drop integration builders.
βOur users include online fashion retailers, school administrators, and asset managers β the vast majority of which have never touched a line of code,β he said. βThey use us to saveΒ hoursΒ a day on tasks ranging from customer support automation to customer relationship management data entry.β
Frazerβs not wrong about the opportunity. Per the IDG and TeamDynamix poll, 66% percent of companies said that theyβll invest in iPaaS to address internal automation and data integration challenges.
βWe think a gigantic enterprise opportunity is in increasing the simplicity of automation and delivering easy-to-use tooling that empowers nontechnical folks,β Frazer said.
Itβs very early days for DryMerge, which only has around 2,000 users at present. But the company was accepted into Y Combinatorβs Winter 2024 batch, and DryMerge this past summer closed a $2.2 million seed round led by Garage Capital with participation from Goodwater Capital, Ritual Capital, and angels whose names Frazer wouldnβt reveal.
Frazer says that the funds are being put toward adding new app integrations and doubling the size of DryMergeβs team in the next few months.