Valorx builds a bulk-data editing layer for Salesforce, letting users export CRM data into Excel, modify it, and sync changes back without leaving the interface. The tech stack reveals a QA-heavy organization: Selenium, TestNG, BrowserStack, and Sauce Labs dominate, paired with custom automation frameworks and regression testing. Active hiring skews engineering-heavy, with half the team focused on QA and automation—a direct response to their internal pain point of building and maintaining test infrastructure from scratch.
Valorx is a Salesforce data-management tool designed for teams that spend too much time on CRM data updates and struggle with bulk operations. The product operates as a bridge between Excel workflows (familiar to business users) and Salesforce, addressing the friction of slow, manual data entry and synchronization. Founded in 2019 and headquartered in Pleasanton, CA, the company employs 51–200 people and is expanding hiring across engineering, marketing, and sales in the US, Canada, Malaysia, and India. The platform surfaces two core value drivers: speed in bulk data handling and data-quality improvement through deduplication and sync reliability.
Valorx runs on Salesforce, Marketo, React, Node.js, Java, and Jenkins for CI/CD. QA tooling includes Selenium, TestNG, BrowserStack, Sauce Labs, and Selenium Grid. Frontend uses Angular, TypeScript, and Figma for design.
Current projects include multi-touch attribution model implementation, automated deduplication workflows, Marketo-to-Salesforce sync resolution, and building a custom automation framework from scratch to address existing QA gaps.
Valorx's technology stack, projects, and hiring signals are inferred from public hiring and company data — career pages, public listings, and company web presence — then clustered and de-duplicated. Figures are estimates that refresh over time. Read our full methodology →
This is not an official vendor or customer list. It is a technology-adoption signal inferred from public data, intended for B2B research.