A public REST API at api-docs.catsy.com handles catalog sync between the PIM/DAM and ERP, CRM, and ecommerce channels using bearer-token auth. Developer materials are lean: no published OpenAPI spec, SDKs, GraphQL, or webhook documentation; template exports fill the gaps.
Catsy scores C+ on the API Report Card. A public REST API at api-docs.catsy.com handles catalog sync between the PIM/DAM and ERP, CRM, and ecommerce channels using bearer-token auth. Developer materials are lean: no published OpenAPI spec, SDKs, GraphQL, or webhook documentation; template exports fill the gaps.
Catsy has an official API, but teams routinely hit its limits: gated access, partial coverage, or paid tiers. Most end up supplementing it with exports or an unofficial API layer like Supergood.
Catsy is a cloud-based, integrated Product Information Management (PIM) and Digital Asset Management (DAM) platform that centralizes product attributes, taxonomy, and rich media (images, video, PDFs, 3D files) for brands, manufacturers, and distributors, then syndicates that content to ecommerce platforms, retailer endpoints, and partner portals from a single source of truth.
Horizontal/cross-industry commerce infrastructure sold into mid-market brands, manufacturers, and distributors, particularly industrial manufacturers, electronics, automotive parts, hardware, lighting, furniture, and CPG. Centralized product hub with governed attributes, taxonomy, and channel-specific variants for brands and manufacturers. Digital asset management for product imagery, video, PDFs, and 3D files alongside SKU records.
Low-Medium.
Founded: Chicago, IL (founding year varies by source: LinkedIn 2003, Crunchbase 2012; long-established mid-market PIM/DAM vendor). Founder: Sanjeev Teku. Headquarters: 505 N LaSalle Drive, Suite 300, Chicago, IL; secondary office in Brooklyn, NY.
Founded in Chicago, IL by Sanjeev Teku, founding date varies across public sources (LinkedIn lists 2003, Crunchbase 2012, other directories 2014; the company has been operating in PIM/catalog software for well over a decade either way).
Grades measure one thing: can a customer's engineering team get their own data out programmatically? We check six things (whether a real API exists, how access is gated, data coverage, auth quality, docs and developer experience, and stability) and roll them into a letter grade. Grades get re-verified, and they only move on evidence.