Investors once saw Canadian start -up AI co -exist as a promising candidate to challenge Openai and Anthropic in the race to build AI Frontier models, with his supporters pouring about $ 1 billion for their bet on CEO Aidan Gomez, Llms when he was 20 year old google.
But Cohere’s AI models have fallen behind the latest technology, and her business has not escalated like its competitors.
Now, the company is bringing a veteran research leader to renew AI’s efforts: Cohere has hired Joelle Pineau, a former Vice President of AI Meta, who previously oversees the tech Giant Fundamental Laboratory. In the newly appointed head of AI Officer, Pineau will oversee AI strategy throughout Cohere’s products and policies.
A Canadian AI scientist and Professor McGill, Pineau helped guide the early development of Meta’s Llama AI models along with Yann Lecun, a pioneer of neural networks. Pineau left Meta in May after almost eight years with the company.
For Cohere this is a great lease and it is the protection of his hopes for the veteran that helps him with more research discoveries, improving the research and product pipeline and hiring top talents.
Leasing comes in a central moment for Cohere: The company seeks to raise up to $ 500 million in a Estimate of $ 6.3 billion – An impressive amount was the startup that did not compete with Openai, Google, Meta and Anthropic, whose war breasts are worth a billions of billions each.
But while his opponents try to develop AI systems that can fit (or transcend) human performance in a wide variety of duties, Cohere has a closer focus. The start creates mainly AI applications that can solve practical problems for businesses and government services, highlighting privacy and security.
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In an interview with TechCrunch, Pineau said that Cohere Focus in real, business applications is something that is excited. “Many players out there are quite separately focused on Agi, Superintelligence, and so on,” Pineau said, stressing companies such as the former Meta employer, who recently invested billions in the new Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL) unit. “They don’t have to understand what this AI is going to be used.”
He showed the launch of the GPT-5 from Openai last week, which many felt was sluggish, as proof that the timetable for achi could be “a little more than we thought”. In the meantime, Pineau says there is a lot of room for more practical AI models to give productivity to different industries.
A Canadian local, Pineau said he has a look at Cohere since it was founded in 2019 and is excited to contribute to a company whose founders are based on her home country.
In addition to patriotism, Pineau feels that the opportunity with cohere is a good opportunity to go beyond research. In Fair, Pineau overseered research teams working on projects that could last anywhere from 18 months to 10 years to deliver. Now, it will work in a much stricter timetable, as well as engaging in customers and products. And even though Cohere has fewer resources than Meta, Pineau said he would be more agile in her new role.
Cohere’s latest product is an AI Agent platform called North that businesses and government services can develop privately with their own infrastructure, an attractive concept for many of its customers, which are banks and federal organizations that handle particularly sensitive data. This puts in combination with open source providers such as Deepseek and Meta, whose models can also run locally, but at a lower cost. Cohere bets that by offering more support for its private developments, it can win open models.
Pineau said she is particularly interested in preparing Cohere’s research around the north, finding ways to develop AI dealers in private and secure arrangements and creating reference points to evaluate these systems. Pineau also said that she is interested in exploring how AI agents interact with each other in the real world.
An immediate challenge for Pineau will replace AI Cohere Vice President Sara Hooker, who announced her departure This week after several years helping to build the company’s research program. The hiring of a Hooker’s caliber researcher can be difficult in the current market, given the demand for AI talent.
But Pineau sees this as an opportunity to “bring many talents”, noting that when she left Meta, many of her former colleagues suggested that she follow her to a new AI workshop. However, he stressed that Cohere has a stable AI researchers and that it is important not only to bring to anyone.
“Hiring a heap of superstar does not necessarily make a superstar team,” Pineau said. “It’s really about how people work together.”
Of course, Meta’s AI units today look very different compared to when they were there a few months ago. During the summer, Mark Zuckerberg went to a recruitment spree, reportedly offering some of the best AI compensation packages north of $ 100 million to join MSL. This has prompted Openai to increase the compensation for its stars employees, making it difficult enough for younger players to land AI’s leading researchers.
As Meta, Openai and Anthropic drop billions of dollars in their AI efforts, Cohere is trying to do more with less. For Pineau, this will mean making calculated research elements – the kind that can be quickly converted into exciting products and keep the company in the race.
