In just eight months of existence, SolveAI has raised $50 million.Â
Thatâs shorter than a pregnancy, but longer than an NFL season. The enterprise coding startupâincorporated in July by former Palantir engineer Steve Basherâhas eleven employees, and raised its $5 million Accel-led pre-seed in August. Basherâs idea was simple: That an AI coding tool must be completely specific to the company using it.
âAIâs somewhat useless without context,â Basher told Fortune. âContext is everything. So, our product is: what framework do you build to capture a companyâs context?â
SolveAI got its second funding bump in November, as Google Ventures led the London-based companyâs $45 million Series A, Fortune has exclusively learned. The startupâs investors so far also include Northzone, Mantis VC, and NeverLift, along with Palantir CISO Mike LoSapio, Google DeepMindâs Pushmeet Kohli, and OpenAIâs Olivier Godement.
SolveAI is riding several waves, a high-velocity story in a fast-moving market. The company is, for example, operating in the hot but hypercompetitive AI coding tool space, which includes companies like Cursor (valued at $29.3 billion) and Lovable (valued at $6.6 billion). Lovable, in particular, is a worthwhile point of comparison, as in some sense itâs already scaling to do what SolveAI doesââvibe code,â or help non-technical people use natural language to build software.Â
âLovable is fantastic for consumers,â said Basher. âItâs built around people who donât have technical opinions. But I thinkâbeyond just Lovable, in the broader categoryâno oneâs figured out how to cover that last-mile. No oneâs yet figured out how to generate software that actually is as if the enterpriseâs own engineers had written it.â
Basher believes that SolveAI can, yes, solve that last-mile for large companies looking to vibe code with their employees. Tom Hulme, GV managing partner, believes Basher and SolveAI can win on getting the details right.
âHow enterprises write and deploy software is so nuanced that moving from prototypes to scalable production requires a deep understanding of this,â said Hulme via email. The endgame, he says, âallows a generation of bespoke, production-ready, and compliant software solutions.â
This gets Basherâs philosophy around what it means to find AI ROI, a subject of much consternation among enterprises.Â
âThe more we can understand about a company, the better we can serve it,â said Basher. âWhy would anyone want to use anyone else? You want to use something that knows your company better than you do.â
See you tomorrow,
Allie Garfinkle
X: @agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
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This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
