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Tiugo Technologies Appoints Matt Quarles as Chief Revenue Officer

Business

Tiugo Technologies Appoints Matt Quarles as Chief Revenue Officer
Business

Business

Tiugo Technologies Appoints Matt Quarles as Chief Revenue Officer

2026-01-08 22:06 Last Updated At:01-09 18:46

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan 8, 2026--

Tiugo Technologies, a PSG portfolio company offering a collection of market-leading developer tools in the content creation and digital collaboration markets, announced today the appointment of Matt Quarles as Chief Revenue Officer (CRO).

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260108339558/en/

Quarles will employ his deep expertise to lead strategic initiatives across the Tiugo brand portfolio, including:

“Matt’s extensive experience in advancing enterprise growth and architecting and executing strategic sales and customer initiatives makes him an invaluable addition to our leadership team,” noted Mark Hatton, CEO of Tiugo Technologies. “His vision will truly integrate our go-to-market approach and enhance and broaden relationships across our global customer base.”

Quarles comes to Tiugo from his CRO role at Salt Security, a provider of SaaS-based, end-to-end API security solutions, where his global responsibilities included sales, account management, sales engineering, solutions architecture, customer success and revenue operations. Previously, he was the CRO of software platform providers Evident ID, Ionic Security (acquired by Twilio) and Posit PBC. He also enjoyed an eight-year career at Accenture, during which he received consistent promotions. Before that, he served as a distinguished executive enterprise sales leader during Google Cloud's start-up phase.

“Tiugo plays a critical role in how organizations create and manage content, and that role is becoming even more important as AI accelerates,” said Quarles. “Customers don’t just need AI – they need confidence that what AI produces fits seamlessly into their workflows, standards, and governance models. This is the right moment for Tiugo to help customers bridge that gap, and I’m excited to work with the team to scale an enterprise motion that delivers real, durable value.”

About Tiugo Technologies

Tiugo Technologies is a launchpad for new developer platforms, helping software companies accelerate growth, increase operating efficiency and scale their business. As an affiliate of PSG, Tiugo aims to assemble a portfolio of API-first, market-leading developer platforms focused on content creation and digital collaboration. Bringing together top-class content experiences with an objective to succeed in the competitive developer platform market, Tiugo’s collection of companies offers holistic, differentiated solutions that create more value together than they can alone. Tiugo’s current family of brands includes ButterCMS, Tiny Technologies, CKSource and Uploadcare. Explore how Tiugo is shaping the digital content future at tiugotech.com.

Matt Quarles, Chief Revenue Officer at Tiugo Technologies

Matt Quarles, Chief Revenue Officer at Tiugo Technologies

LONDON (AP) — Thousands of homes and businesses across northern France and southern England were without power Friday morning and residents faced widespread travel delays after a storm swept in off the Atlantic, bringing high winds, rain and snow to the region.

The low-pressure system, named Storm Goretti, pummeled the Isles of Scilly overnight with wind gusts up to 99 mph (159 kph) recorded in the archipelago off the southwestern tip of England. Local government officials reported blocked roads, unstable buildings and power outages that left some people without water.

More than 57,000 were without power across southwestern England, the Midlands and Wales, according to National Grid, which runs the country’s electricity transmission network.

As the storm moved across the United Kingdom it collided with an existing mass of Arctic air, bringing snow to northern areas and heavy rain to the south.

That extended the misery in northern Scotland, where snowplows have been working overtime to keep roads open after more than half a meter (20 inches) of snow fell earlier in the week. More than 250 schools across Scotland were closed on Friday, with some remaining shut for a fifth straight day.

National Rail warned people across the U.K. to check before traveling because the storm had disrupted services across England, Scotland and Wales. Birmingham Airport, which closed briefly due to snow, said had reopened with “reduced runway operations.”

The disruptions came after the Met Office, Britain’s national weather service, issued a rare red weather warning — its highest — in southwestern England for Thursday evening.

Red warnings are issued when the forecaster considers it “very likely” there will be life-threatening conditions.

Strong winds from Storm Goretti also battered northwestern France on Friday, knocking out power to about 380,000 homes, authorities said. No major damage was reported Friday morning.

Most of the outages were concentrated in the Normandy region, according to Enedis, the national power grid operator.

France’s national weather service, Météo-France, had issued weather warnings ahead of the storm, urging residents to remain home. An overnight wind gust of up to 213 kph (132 mph) was recorded in Gatteville-le-Phare in Normandy.

Regional train services were suspended across northwestern France, with disruptions expected to last at least until Friday afternoon. High-speed rail services were operating, and authorities said they anticipated minimal impact on flights at Paris airports.

People cross the medieval Charles Bridge during a heavy snowfall in Prague, Czech Republic, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

People cross the medieval Charles Bridge during a heavy snowfall in Prague, Czech Republic, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

A man clears snow from a walking path during a heavy snowfall in Prague, Czech Republic, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

A man clears snow from a walking path during a heavy snowfall in Prague, Czech Republic, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

Vehicles covered in snow are parked in Dowlais, near Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, as Storm Goretti continues in the UK. (Ben Birchall/PA via AP)

Vehicles covered in snow are parked in Dowlais, near Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, as Storm Goretti continues in the UK. (Ben Birchall/PA via AP)

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