ContractorHUB Secures Strategic Backing to Build the AI Operating System for Contractors
The best tools don’t announce themselves. They just start getting used, passed around, and quietly become the thing crews rely on when the day gets messy. Out of Nashville, Tennessee, ContractorHUB is building an AI-native operating system for contractors who are too busy running crews and closing jobs to babysit five different dashboards that don’t talk to each other. And now they’ve pulled in a strategic investment from a group of industry operators who don’t just write checks, they run the play every day. Amount undisclosed, which usually means the real value isn’t the number, it’s who’s sitting at the table.
Sarah Parks, Co-Founder and CEO, and Matt P, Founder and CPIO, didn’t cook this up in a conference room with sticky notes and optimism. This came from inside the job site, inside the chaos, inside the spreadsheets that somehow became strategy. They built alongside contractors, not above them, shaping the product through a Founders Beta where feedback isn’t a feature, it’s the foundation.
And that’s the part most people miss. When your investors are also your customers, the margin for nonsense disappears. Mast Roofing & Construction, Nelson Roofing, Eco Paving, these aren’t logos for a slide deck, they’re operators betting on something they’re already using. That’s not hype. That’s alignment with teeth.
The product itself plays a different game. ContractorHUB isn’t trying to be another tool in the belt. It’s trying to be the belt. Pulling data from CRM, job management, accounting, and marketing systems into one clean command center, then layering in intelligence to turn that mess into decisions you can actually act on. Dashboards, benchmarks, operational health, all tuned for businesses doing between $5M–$30M in revenue with teams that don’t have time for theory, typically 20–50 employees deep and moving fast.
This round is less about fuel and more about signal. It says the people closest to the problem trust this solution enough to fund it. It says vertical software still has blind spots, especially in industries that don’t spend their days on Twitter talking about SaaS multiples. And it says that if you want to win in markets like this, you don’t start with software. You start with sweat, then earn your way into the system.
ContractorHUB is leaning into a segment that’s been overlooked but never small. Contractors across the United States and Canada, building real businesses, generating real revenue, and finally getting tools that respect both. Expansion into more home service verticals is already in motion, but the real story is simpler. When operators back operators, things tend to get built that actually work.









