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Corgi launches Dataroom to unify insurance document sharing and analytics

Corgi’s new Dataroom packs secure sharing, e-signatures and engagement analytics into one workspace, after the insurer used a patchwork of tools to track document activity.

Daniel Reid··2 min read
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Corgi launches Dataroom to unify insurance document sharing and analytics
Source: prnewswire.com

Corgi launched Dataroom on June 24, putting secure sharing, e-signatures, virtual data rooms and engagement analytics into a single workspace. The product is aimed squarely at insurance paperwork, where policy documents, certificates of insurance, customer agreements and fundraising materials all have to move quickly and leave an audit trail.

The company says Dataroom was born inside its own insurance operations, where teams had been stitching together file-sharing software, virtual data rooms and spreadsheets just to see whether a document was opened, signed or stalled. Corgi says the new system lets users share files through secure links, collect legally binding electronic signatures, create and manage data rooms, and watch document activity from one dashboard instead of bouncing between disconnected tools.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That internal-first origin matters because Corgi is not pitching Dataroom as a standalone productivity layer. Its press materials describe the product as one of several internal tools built for its own operations and customers, which fits the company’s broader identity as an AI-native, full-stack insurance company built for startups. Corgi was founded by Emily Yuan and Nico Laqua, and it said in May that it had raised $160 million in Series B funding at a $1.3 billion valuation. Forbes later reported that Corgi added another $106 million round that lifted its valuation to $2.6 billion.

The launch also lands in a company that has been building on insurance infrastructure rather than just selling software to carriers. TCV has described Corgi as a licensed carrier and reinsurer that built underwriting, claims and policy administration systems on AI-native infrastructure, a profile that helps explain why document workflow turned into product code in the first place. In P&C operations, where renewal packets, certificates and underwriting submissions can stall in a dozen different places, the appeal is not just storage but visibility into who touched what and when.

Within a day of the release, Papermark co-founder Marc Seitz publicly accused Corgi of copying Papermark’s open-source data-room code and asked for the product to be taken down. Corgi denied the claim, and no lawsuit has been filed. The dispute gives Dataroom an unusually sharp competitive edge for a workflow tool, especially in a market where document sharing, permissions, audit logs and page-level analytics have become familiar terrain.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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