Poland produced one of the world’s most valuable AI companies almost by accident. Now it is spending public money to make sure the next one stays closer to home.
Vinci, the venture arm of Poland’s state development bank BGK, has taken an $11mn stake in ElevenLabs, the AI-voice firm valued at $11bn. The same day, it launched AI Lab Poland, a national programme to funnel funding, mentoring and global contacts to the country’s early-stage AI startups.
The sum is tiny next to the valuation, which is rather the point. This is less an investment than a statement of intent.
Claiming a homegrown champion
ElevenLabs is Polish by origin, not by address. It was founded in 2022 by two Warsaw-born friends, Mati Staniszewski and Piotr Dąbkowski, reportedly out of frustration with Poland’s tradition of dubbing every film character with a single monotone narrator.
It now serves about 100 million users in more than 70 languages, with customers including Salesforce and Adobe, and is headquartered abroad. By buying in, Poland gets to formally claim the success, and ElevenLabs gets a tighter link to a country it still wants to grow in. It plans to lift its Warsaw headcount past 200, from 60 today.
The sovereignty play
The timing is not coincidental. Europe is in the middle of an anxious debate about depending on American AI, sharpened when the US restricted access to Anthropic’s top models and handed Europe’s own champions a talking point.
Poland’s pitch is that it already has the raw materials: two of Europe’s 19 sovereign AI compute hubs and more than 45,000 IT graduates a year. AI Lab Poland is the attempt to convert that into companies.
Whether it works is the open question
Government-backed startup programmes have a patchy record, and an $11mn cheque buys symbolism rather than influence over a firm worth a thousand times more.
ElevenLabs has dangled the prize Poland wants most: it says it could be ready to go public in two to three years, and is weighing a dual listing in Warsaw. If that happens, the bet pays off twice. If it doesn’t, AI Lab Poland still has to prove it can grow a second success rather than just celebrate the first.


