Gumloop Raises $50M in Series B Funding to Expand Enterprise AI Agents and Automations
The venture market has a funny way of revealing what actually matters. When serious investors move fast and show up together, it usually means a company has crossed that invisible line between interesting idea and inevitable momentum. Gumloop just had one of those moments. $50M in fresh Series B capital just landed on the table, led by Benchmark with support from Nexus Venture Partners, First Round Capital, Y Combinator, BoxGroup, The Cannon Project, and Shopify Ventures. Not a bad guest list for a company that started in 2023 and already has serious operators paying attention.
Credit where it is due. Founder and CEO Max Brodeur-Urbas and co-founder Rahul Behal have been building something that speaks directly to the modern workplace dilemma. Everyone wants AI. Almost nobody wants to wrestle with building it. Gumloop slides right into that gap with a platform that lets teams create AI agents and automate real workflows without needing a small army of engineers hovering nearby.
The premise sounds simple until you realize how much work actually lives inside those automations. Sales teams chasing leads. Marketing teams swimming through data. Operations managers juggling tools that refuse to talk to each other. Gumloop agents plug into the stack and start doing the digital heavy lifting. Slack, Microsoft Teams, email, CRMs, the usual suspects. The result is less time wrestling dashboards and more time actually moving the business forward.
Then there is Gumstack, the quiet muscle behind the curtain. While everyone else is racing to bolt AI into every corner of the office, Gumloop built a governance layer that keeps the whole thing from turning into the Wild West. Monitoring, control, and visibility across AI usage all live in one place. Security teams breathe easier. Leadership gets accountability. And the builders inside the company still get the freedom to experiment.
The market is responding. Companies like Shopify, Ramp, Gusto, Samsara, Instacart, and Opendoor are already putting Gumloop to work. Thousands of employees inside those organizations are now building AI driven workflows without needing a PhD in machine learning. That is the real unlock. AI stops being a science project and starts becoming a daily habit inside the company.
This is also a quiet lesson in how strong startups actually get built. Start with a real problem. Ship something people can use immediately. Listen to customers who are knee deep in the work. Then bring in partners who know how to scale a category. Benchmark and the rest of this investor bench clearly see where the puck is heading.
Now the real fun begins. $50M buys a lot of runway, but it also raises the tempo. More product. More adoption. More teams discovering that the fastest way to move work forward might not be hiring another analyst, but spinning up an agent that never sleeps and never complains about Monday mornings.









