One of Berlin’s rising startups, Peec AIjust surpassed $10 million in annual revenue, according to internal dashboard data seen and verified by TechCrunch.
Peec AI raised its $21 million Series A six months ago. While CEO Marius Meiners didn’t reveal his valuation to me at the time (disclosing only that it was more than $100 million), he said the startup had grown its revenue to more than $4 million within 10 months of its launch.
Thus, it has more than doubled its revenue trajectory and at a faster pace.
Peec helps brands track and improve their visibility in AI searches. While based in Berlin, recently opened an office in New York.
It also serves as evidence of one of the key market changes happening in Europe’s tech scene.
“Founders these days are watching revenue much more closely,” Antler partner Christoph Klink told me just a few days ago. Sitting in a hotel lobby bar during a week full of events for the tech ecosystem, the Berlin-based VC had unexpectedly cited Peec AI as one of the most successful companies in his portfolio, along with Lovable and others.
My next question was how he defined success, which led to a discussion of recent market cycles. Compared to six years ago, he said, the big change is that success is now defined by growth rather than valuation.
Having learned from the folly of 2021 and the subsequent painful return to reality, investors now know that revenue cannot be an afterthought. The bottom line is it’s not something you can check every two weeks, Klink told me.
Start-ups now tend to continue to run revenue progress dashboards, sometimes – as is the case at Peec – visible to all employees.
For some founders, this took some adjusting. but others were born just for this new cycle.
Peec AI’s product takes the same approach as SEO dashboards, except it helps brands track search engine optimization (GEO) — visualizing whether they’re showing up when users type in a certain set of prompts in ChatGPT and the like.
But as Meiners told me at the time, he’s also a former esports player who was once ranked in the top 100 League of Legends players. That explains why he would share a revenue tracker with his entire company: his track record gave him a unique insight into what makes a team a winner.
Talent is the first ingredient and Peec AI has taken an innovative approach to recruitment in the competitive Berlin market.
Like many startups in the Bay Area, but very few in Europe, it invested in billboards to market itself not only to prospective clients, but also to applicants. In our conversation, Klink recalled with a smile that these billboards were often strategically placed in front of other tech companies around town.
What these billboards say may vary, but they are part of a narrative that attempts to position Peec AI as a company worth jumping on board with. According to Klink, this signaling is especially important in the current AI cycle, where companies and investors are banking on emerging trends — such as AI search.
That bet on undercurrents is true of many startups Klink has invested in, so he understands why portfolio companies like Peec AI — and Lovable — not only keep a close eye on ARR, but sometimes publicly disclose revenue milestones even though they’re under no obligation to do so.
“This is one way to show that it works,” Klink said. “It also shows a focus on growth that defines the culture.”
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