Alster New CEO At Omatic Software

Brian Alster is the new chief executive officer of Omatic Software in Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina. He joined Omatic from Altrata, where he was CEO of the data platform for global wealth intelligence, professional relationship mapping, and market dynamics, including providing nonprofits with data for identifying and engaging donors. 

Prior to Altrata, Alster spent 13 years at Dun & Bradstreet in leadership roles, ultimately serving as general manager of the North American Finance & Risk business and a member of the company’s Management Committee. He led the Dun & Bradstreet’s largest business unit, responsible for more than $900 million in annual revenue, according to an announcement from the firm.

Clearhaven Partners announced in July 2025 that the firm had made a “significant investment in Omatic.” The private equity firm has since invested in expanding the leadership team and in product innovation. Terms of the investment were not disclosed, according to the new announcement.

Omatic’s flagship product, Omatic Cloud, is built for nonprofits and developed by domain experts, according to an announcement from the firm. Omatic serves more than 3,000 nonprofits globally including those in healthcare, cause & cure, higher education, K-12, family and human services, arts and cultural, and faith-based sectors.

“Brian’s depth of expertise in data and technology and his exceptional track record as a leader make him the ideal person to steward Omatic in its next chapter,” Michelle Noon, founder and managing partner at Boston-based Clearhaven Partners, said via a statement. “We are thankful for Daniel Kim’s stewardship over the past decade at Omatic, as he established Omatic as the clear leader in nonprofit data integration.”  

Alster said via a statement: “Omatic’s mission is to amplify nonprofit impact through unified data. I know first-hand the challenges nonprofits face with incomplete records, disconnected systems, and decisions made based on incorrect or disjointed data — all of which take away from their important work fulfilling their missions.”