Berlin-based Parloa has raised $350 million in Series D funding from existing investors, valuing the six-year-old customer service AI startup at $3 billion. The round comes just eight months after the company raised $120 million at a $1 billion valuation.
The new round was led by General Catalyst, with participation from returning backers including EQT Ventures, Altimeter Capital, Durable Capital and Mosaic Ventures.
Parloa is one of several startups developing AI agents that promise to automate the kind of customer service work previously handled by human representatives and help desk staff.
The company’s competitors include Sierra, co-founded by OpenAI president Bret Taylor, which raised $350 million at a $10 billion valuation in September. and Decagon, reportedly in talks to raise capital at an upward valuation 4 billion dollars. Other companies working to replace human agents with AI include older players Intercom and Kore.ai, as well as UK-based PolyAI, which raised an $86 million round in $750 million valuation last month.
Malte Kosub, co-founder and CEO of Parloa, doesn’t seem fazed by the competition, mostly because he doesn’t think this is a winner-take-all category. “At the end of the day, it’s one of the biggest opportunities ever in software,” he told TechCrunch.
Indeed, Parloa and its rivals are racing to automate a significant portion of the global customer support workforce, which Gartner estimates 17 million representatives of contact centers around the world.
But it’s not just the size of the market that gives Kosub confidence in Parloa’s ability to win. He pointed to the startup’s massive fundraising as a sign that it could be among the top leaders in the space. “There are a lot of companies out there, but you have to look at the scale and the amount of funding they’ve got,” he said. “The number of competitors is significantly reduced.”
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Last month, Parloa said it was generating annual recurring revenue more than 50 million dollarsbut this is not substantially ahead of Poly AI, which expected to end 2025 with ARR of $40 millionor Decagon, which is according to information pulling in “significantly more” than $30 million in ARR. However, Kosub seems confident that such good capitalization will help his startup move forward.
Parloa’s AI agents already answer calls for large enterprise clients including Allianz, Booking.com, HealthEquity, SAP, Sedgwick and Swiss Life, but the CEO says the goal is to do more than just build software that “picks up the phone.”
The company will invest a significant portion of its new capital to create a “multi-model, contextual experience” that will allow personalized AI agents to recognize a customer’s identity and specific needs, whether they communicate via an app, website or phone call.
