⬤ Genspark just closed a $275 million Series B at a $1.25 billion valuation, marking a major step forward for the AI productivity company. The startup's Super Agent platform, which went live in April, reached a $50 million annual run rate within five months and now features over 20 AI sub-agents working together. The company says its month-one paid retention sits between 88 and 92 percent, showing users are sticking around after trying the product.
⬤ The funding round brought in backing from Emergence Capital, SBI Investment, LG Technology Ventures, Pavilion Capital, Uphonest Capital, and all previous investors. Genspark has grown its team to more than 40 people while building out infrastructure for multi-agent AI workflows. The company believes Super Agent's quick adoption shows businesses want AI systems that can handle complete projects instead of just individual tasks, offering a simpler alternative to juggling multiple AI tools.
⬤ Genspark also rolled out its AI Workspace, which it's calling the first platform built to run complex workflows on autopilot. The system aims to solve common problems people face with AI tools today—constantly switching between apps, managing too many subscriptions, copying data back and forth, and filling in manual steps. Workspace lets users create complete deliverables like board presentations, financial models, and web apps by giving the system just a few prompts, then letting the coordinated sub-agents handle everything else automatically.
⬤ This matters because it shows how quickly AI companies are moving toward all-in-one platforms that can deliver finished business work. Genspark's funding size, combined with its early revenue numbers and retention rates, suggests strong market appetite for automation systems that cut down on complexity. As the space develops, tools focused on handling multi-step processes could drive how businesses adopt AI across their operations.
Saad Ullah
Saad Ullah