AI

Cognigy lands cash to grow its contact center automation business

Comment

Focused indian female professional helpline call center agent operator telemarketer wear wireless headset work in customer care support service team office talking consulting client at workplace
Image Credits: fizkes / Getty Images

Philipp Heltewig, who was CIO at marketing firm Sitecore before it was sold to private equity group EQT in 2016, joined forces with Sascha Poggemann and Benjamin Mayr eight years ago to found Cognigy, a customer service automation startup. The impetus was what they perceived as confusion about AI’s capabilities among both consumers and C-suite execs alike, Heltewig says — particularly confusion about AI’s limitations.

“Big Tech companies have ‘mis-set’ expectations when it comes to AI,” Heltewig told TechCrunch. “In 2015, IBM was claiming that its Watson platform could do everything. In 2024, that’s coming back as ‘Copilot can do everything.’ Neither is true.”

With Cognigy, Heltewig, Poggemann and Mayr sought to deliver on a more humble promise: helping create AI that can handle the highly repetitive, rote processes that call center workers face daily.

AI for contact centers isn’t a new trend. According to one survey, over half of businesses have already invested in AI capabilities to support their customer service operations. Per market research firm Markets and Markets, revenue in the market for call center AI alone is set to climb from $1.6 billion in 2022 to $4.1 billion by year-end 2027.

Aside from Big Tech incumbents, many, many startups offer AI-powered products to automate basic call center tasks. There’s Parloa, which focuses on text-to-speech applications; Kore.ai, which is developing enterprise-focused conversational AI apps; Lang, whose tech automatically tags and categorizes customer conversations; and PolyAI and Retell AI, both of which are building autonomous phone agents.

So what sets Cognigy apart? For one, the platform can be deployed either locally or in a private or public cloud (e.g., AWS). And it’s scalable; Cognigy manages AI agents that can handle up to tens of thousands of customer conversations at once.

cognigy
Image Credits: Cognigy

“Cognigy provides a platform to build, operate and analyze AI agents for customer experiences in the contact center,” Heltewig said. “As well as serving end customers, the same AI agents switch roles to act as agent ‘copilots,’ providing contextual assistance to human agents and automating routine tasks such as call wrap-up.”

Cognigy sells three core products: (1) A self-service Q&A chatbot that draws on an organization’s knowledge base to answer customer inquiries, (2) a toolset to build chatbot experiences, and (3) an AI-powered support agent dashboard to serve potentially useful information to agents during customer interactions.

Cognigy trains its own generative AI models to power aspects of its platform. But it also integrates models from third parties, such as OpenAI’s recently launched GPT-4o, Anthropic’s Claude 3, Google’s Gemini and Aleph Alpha’s Luminous.

The vendor-agnostic, bring-your-own-model approach might be one of the reasons Cognigy grew so robustly in recent years.

The company has around 175 customers today deploying Cognigy contact center solutions across 1,000 different brands, including Toyota and Bosch, and just this week, Cognigy closed a sizable Series C tranche led by European private equity group Eurazeo. Along with Insight Partners, DTCP and DN Capital, Eurazeo invested $100 million in Cognigy, bringing Cognigy’s total raised to $175 million.

With a workforce of 175 based in Düsseldorf and San Francisco, which Heltewig expects will grow to 250 by the end of the year, Cognigy plans to invest the new capital in geographic expansion across the U.S. and product R&D.

“We’re aiming to enable the creation of more sophisticated customer service solutions and the acceleration of AI-first technologies that deliver return on investment,” Heltewig said.

More TechCrunch

The U.S. Commerce Department today issued a report in support of “open-weight” generative AI models like Meta’s Llama 3.1, but recommended the government develop “new capabilities” to monitor these models…

U.S. Commerce Department report endorses ‘open’ AI models

Shared micromobility giant Lime is piloting two new vehicles designed to appeal to women and older folks who might appreciate a lower step-through frame, smaller wheels and an upgrade from…

Lime is piloting two new e-bikes to attract more women and older riders 

Apple has published a technical paper detailing the models that it developed to power Apple Intelligence, the range of generative AI features headed to iOS, macOS and iPadOS over the…

Apple says it took a ‘responsible’ approach to training its Apple Intelligence models

A fireside chat on Monday between Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg at the SIGGRAPH 2024 conference in Colorado took a few unexpected turns. It started innocently…

Huang and Zuckerberg swapped jackets at SIGGRAPH 2024 and things got weird

Meta’s machine learning model, Segment Anything, has a sequel: It now takes the model to the video domain, showing how fast the field is moving.

Zuckerberg touts Meta’s latest video vision AI with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang

Featured Article

The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Here is a timeline of the events that led fledgling automaker Fisker to file for bankruptcy.

The fall of EV startup Fisker: A comprehensive timeline

Hello, and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. In case you missed it, Boeing and NASA decided to keep Starliner docked to the International Space Station for the rest of the…

TechCrunch Space: Catching stars

As failed EV startup Fisker winds its way through bankruptcy, a persistent and tricky question has become a flashpoint of the proceedings: does its only secured lender, Heights Capital Management,…

The question haunting Fisker’s bankruptcy

So-called “unlearning” techniques are used to make a generative AI model forget specific and undesirable info it picked up from training data, like sensitive private data or copyrighted material. But…

Making AI models ‘forget’ undesirable data hurts their performance

Uber is now letting riders in India book up to three rides simultaneously.

Uber now lets users in India book three trips at once

U.S. airports are rolling out facial recognition to scan travelers’ faces before boarding their flights. Americans, at least, can opt out. 

How to opt out of facial recognition at airports (if you’re American)

The promise of AI and large language models (LLMs) is the ability to understand increasingly wider amounts of context and make sense of that information easily, so it makes sense…

Bee AI raises $7M for its wearable AI assistant that learns from your conversations

Featured Article

DEI backlash: Stay up-to-date on the latest legal and corporate challenges

It’s clear that this year will be a turning point for DEI.

DEI backlash: Stay up-to-date on the latest legal and corporate challenges

Bike-taxi startup Rapido, which counts Swiggy among its investors, is the latest Indian firm to become a unicorn.

India’s Rapido becomes a unicorn with fresh $120M funding

Government websites aren’t known for cutting-edge tech. GovWell co-founder and CTO Ben Cohen discovered this while trying to help his dad, a contractor, apply for building permits. Cohen worked as…

GovWell is bringing automation and efficiency to local governments

Critics have long argued that wararantless device searches at the U.S. border are unconstitutional and violate the Fourth Amendment.

US border agents must get warrant before cell phone searches, federal court rules

Featured Article

UK’s Zapp EV plans to expand globally with an early start in India

Zapp is launching its urban electric two-wheeler in India in 2025 as it plans to expand globally.

UK’s Zapp EV plans to expand globally with an early start in India

The first time I saw Google’s latest commercial, I wondered, “Is it just me, or is this kind of bad?” By the fourth or fifth time I saw it, I’d…

Dear Google, who wants an AI-written fan letter?

Featured Article

MatPat, the first big YouTuber to successfully exit his company, is lobbying for creators on Capitol Hill

Though MatPat retired from YouTube, he’s still pretty busy. In fact, he’s been spending a lot of time on Capitol Hill.

MatPat, the first big YouTuber to successfully exit his company, is lobbying for creators on Capitol Hill

Featured Article

A tale of two foldables

Samsung is still foldables’ 500-pound gorilla, but the company successes have made the category significantly less lonely in recent years.

A tale of two foldables

The California Department of Motor Vehicles this week granted Nuro approval to test its third-generation R3 autonomous delivery vehicle in four Bay Area cities, giving the AV startup a positive…

Autonomous delivery startup Nuro is gearing up for a comeback

With Ghostery turning 15 years old this month, TechCrunch caught up with CEO Jean-Paul Schmetz to discuss the company’s strategy and the state of ad tracking.

Ghostery’s CEO says regulation won’t save us from ad trackers

Two years ago, workers at an Apple Store in Towson, Maryland, were the first to establish a formally recognized union at an Apple retail store in the United States. Now…

Apple reaches its first contract agreement with a US retail union

OpenAI is testing SearchGPT, a new AI search experience to compete directly with Google. The feature aims to elevate search queries with “timely answers” from across the internet and allows…

OpenAI comes for Google with SearchGPT

Indian cryptocurrency exchange WazirX announced on Saturday a controversial plan to “socialize” the $230 million loss from its recent security breach among all its customers, a move that has sent…

WazirX to ‘socialize’ $230M security breach loss among customers

Featured Article

Stay up-to-date on the amount of venture dollars going to underrepresented founders

Stay up-to-date on the latest funding news for Black and women founders.

Stay up-to-date on the amount of venture dollars going to underrepresented founders

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the U.S. Commerce Department agency that develops and tests tech for the U.S. government, companies and the broader public, has re-released a…

NIST releases a tool for testing AI model risk

Featured Article

Max Space reinvents expandable habitats with a 17th-century twist, launching in 2026

Max Space’s expandable habitats promise to be larger, stronger, and more versatile than anything like them ever launched, not to mention cheaper and lighter by far than a solid, machined structure.

Max Space reinvents expandable habitats with a 17th-century twist, launching in 2026

Payments giant Stripe has acquired a four-year-old competitor, Lemon Squeezy, the latter company announced Friday. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. As a merchant of record, Lemon Squeezy calculates…

Stripe acquires payment processing startup Lemon Squeezy

iCloud Private Relay has not been working for some Apple users across major markets, including the U.S., Europe, India and Japan.

Apple reports iCloud Private Relay global outages for some users