Qurrent Raises $15M in Series A Funding to Expand Autonomous Digital Workforces
Somewhere in the quiet machinery of the modern enterprise, a strange thing has been happening. Work is getting done, but no one is typing. No coffee breaks. No Slack pings. Just processes moving with the calm rhythm of a system that finally figured out what it was supposed to do all along. That rhythm is exactly where Qurrent lives.
This week the San Francisco company pulled in $15M in Series A funding, led by Cervin Ventures with participation from Streamlined Ventures. Not bad for a company incorporated in June 2023 and already moving like a veteran operator. Credit the architects behind the curtain. Colin T. Wiel, Co-Founder and CEO, has spent decades building companies that understand how operations actually work in the real world. August Rosedale, Co-Founder and CTO, brings the engineering edge that turns ambitious ideas into machinery that runs day and night.
Qurrent’s pitch is simple, which is usually a sign the founders have already wrestled with the complicated parts. Instead of another dashboard begging for attention, Qurrent builds autonomous digital workers. These AI-driven operators take ownership of back-office workflows across finance, supply chain, legal operations, and property management. Not assist. Not suggest. Execute. The company delivers these workers as a fully managed service with performance outcomes baked into the deal. Less software. More digital labor.
And the numbers show these workers are not sitting around waiting for instructions. Qurrent’s digital workforce has already completed more than 6M operational tasks, with task volume nearly tripling since November 2025. One advertising technology platform cut partner payment processing from 25 days to under 30 minutes across more than $100M in monthly payments. A law firm removed manual invoice collection from the human to-do list entirely. A property investment firm reclaimed over 18,000 hours of reconciliation work and more than $800K in annual operational cost. That is not automation theater. That is operational gravity shifting.
Enterprise leaders are starting to notice. Matt Sanchez, COO at Yahoo, has pointed to Qurrent’s ability to push teams toward higher-impact work rather than drowning in repetitive process. Which is the quiet revolution here. For years the software industry sold tools that made workers faster. Qurrent is selling workers made of software.
That distinction matters. When AI stops acting like a clever assistant and starts behaving like a reliable colleague, the math of operations changes. Cervin Ventures and Streamlined Ventures clearly see the direction of travel. And if the early signals are right, Qurrent is not just riding the current of enterprise automation. Colin T. Wiel and August Rosedale are helping define where the current flows next.









