The Amsterdam-headquartered startup has been out of stealth for just eight months, but it already has 350 staff, production deployments across four continents, and a valuation reportedly approaching $1.7 billion
There is a problem that every major enterprise AI deployment eventually runs into: the gap between a convincing demo and a working system in production. Models hallucinate. Integrations break. Compliance requirements differ by country.
Local languages do not behave the way US-centric training data assumes. The organisations best placed to close this gap, the argument goes, are not those with the best models, they are those with the most people on the ground.
That thesis is the foundation of Wonderful, the enterprise AI agent platform founded in early 2025 by Bar Winkler and Roey Lalazar.
The company has raised $150 million in a Series B round led by Insight Partners, with participation from existing backers Index Ventures, IVP, Bessemer Venture Partners, and Vine Ventures.Â
The raise brings Wonderful’s total disclosed funding to $286 million, a striking figure for a company that only emerged from stealth in mid-2025 with a $34 million seed round, then raised a $100 million Series A in November of the same year.
Wonderful is headquartered in Amsterdam, with Israeli founders and a model built on local deployment teams embedded inside client organisations. The company says it now operates in more than 30 countries across Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America, serving enterprises in telecoms, financial services, manufacturing, and healthcare.
It will use the new capital to grow headcount from 350 to approximately 900 by year-end.
The company’s core product is an enterprise AI agent platform, model-agnostic by design, continuously benchmarking and selecting AI models for each use case.
The agents handle customer-facing workflows across voice, chat, and email, as well as internal workflows such as employee onboarding, compliance, and IT support.
What distinguishes Wonderful’s model is the deployment layer: rather than selling software and leaving clients to integrate it themselves, the company embeds local teams inside enterprise environments to manage rollout, integration, and post-deployment optimisation.
“In 2026, enterprises will be deciding who to partner with to operationalize AI across their organizations, and those decisions will hinge on who can deliver deep integrations across complex infrastructures and tailor solutions to each organization’s unique environment,” said Bar Winkler, CEO and Co-founder of Wonderful.
“We built our platform and operating model around that reality, and the demand we’re seeing globally reflects it.”
The company says more than 70% of enterprises that begin with a single use case expand into additional workflows within three months, a retention dynamic that Bar Winkler attributes to Wonderful’s practice of building a shared architecture across an enterprise’s core systems from the outset. Once that foundation is in place, activating new use cases becomes progressively faster.
Wonderful also claims measurable operational results from production deployments: reductions in handling times of up to 60%, containment rates above 80%, and multi-million-dollar annual efficiency gains for individual clients. These figures are not independently audited.
“Over 70% of enterprises that begin with a single use case expand into additional workflows within the first three months,” Winkler added. “That expansion is possible because we built a shared foundation across core systems from day one.”
“Wonderful is establishing trust and deep partnerships inside complex enterprises at a critical moment for the market,” said Jeff Horing, managing director at Insight Partners. “We believe that the team’s combination of platform strength and execution position Wonderful as a strong enterprise partner in today’s ecosystem.”
Lalazar, the company’s CTO, framed the ambition in broader terms. “We’re deploying agents across every business function, while pioneering the next generation of application layers that will transform how organisations operate,” he said.
The enterprise AI agent market is crowded, and growing more so. Salesforce’s Agentforce, ServiceNow’s AI platform, and a wave of better-funded standalone startups are all pursuing the same budget line.
Wonderful’s differentiation rests on a bet that local deployment teams and multilingual agents will be decisive in markets where US-centric platforms struggle, that the structural complexity of global enterprise is, in effect, its moat.
Eight months out of stealth, the bet appears to be attracting capital. Whether it holds at scale is the question this round is funding.


