A console for the second-most important thing your company does.
Communities are where products turn into movements. We think the tools should treat them that way.
Four beliefs we built the product around.
Community is a medium, not a side project.
Telegram and WhatsApp are where the most engaged audiences in 2026 actually live. They deserve a console as serious as any CRM.
Tools should disappear.
We want you to spend more time thinking about what to say and less time copy-pasting it into nine tabs.
Aesthetic is a form of respect.
You look at your dashboard 200 times a day. It should feel like an editorial magazine, not a Twilio console.
The audit trail is the product.
Moderation, scheduling, publishing — none of it matters if you can’t prove what happened. We log everything, immutably.
Before we started, we asked a hundred community operators one question.
“What’s the single most painful part of your week?” The top answer, by a wide margin, was some version of: “Copy-pasting announcements across Telegram channels, WhatsApp groups, Discord servers, and an email list — and never remembering which one got the update last.”
That’s it. That’s the whole pitch. Veluxa is the console we wished existed the week we started asking.
We’re a small team. We raised a seed. We’re based in New York and Berlin. We ship on Tuesdays and Thursdays.