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Kentucky-based Cloverleaf moves to Cincinnati office space


Edge Building
Cloverleaf recently signed a lease at the Edge Building and is already in the move-in process this September.
Cushman & Wakefield

A growing coaching platform is moving across the river to the Edge building in downtown Cincinnati from Covington, Kentucky. 

Cloverleaf, an automated coaching platform for workers and teams, signed a lease at the Edge last week and is already starting the process of moving into its new space. The company was previously located at 434 Madison Ave. in Covington.

A Cloverleaf representative was not immediately available for comment. 

The move comes roughly three months after the fast-growing startup raised a $9 million Series A, led by Chicago-based early-stage capital firm Origin Ventures. At the time, CEO and co-founder Darrin Murriner said the company planned to use the funds to invest in building out its product and technology.

Cloverleaf, a finalist for Cincy Inno's Fire Awards, works to help companies develop and retain staff and teams by unleashing their best work. The company leverages psychology data from behavioral assessments such as DISC and Enneagram to coach team members through the communication and collaboration tools they use every day, including Google Workplace, Microsoft 365, Slack and Microsoft Teams.

Digger Daley, senior director with Cushman & Wakefield, represented the landlord. He said the space leased by Cloverleaf for five years is over 7,000 square feet. The Edge is located at 310 Culvert St.

The Edge building is an old book warehouse, including floor-to-ceiling glass windows and concrete polished floors. It has an industrial feel, plus “the cool factor,” Daley said. The Edge building also has customizable floor plans, a rooftop deck and LEED certification. 

Patrick Reynolds of Crosspoint Commercial Real Estate Services was Cloverleaf’s broker. He said Cloverleaf was very receptive to the vision Daley had for the growing company at the Edge. From the beginning of the search for a new office space, Cloverleaf’s team really liked The Edge building and how it offered a creative and collaborative space.

“It’s open, it’s airy … it allows (Cloverleaf) to grow,” Reynolds said of the space.

This is the second Kentucky company that's announced a moved to Ohio in recent weeks. Columbus Inno reported earlier this month that Nymbl Systems Inc. is moving to Dublin, Ohio, from Lexington, Kentucky, following an investment from venture firm Tamarind Hill.


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