Vancouver-based Gumloop, which offers a no-code platform to automate workflows with artificial intelligence (AI), has secured a $3.1-million seed round. 

Gumloop is now looking to grow its team but “stay lean.” 

The round was led by San Francisco venture capital firm First Round Capital with participation from Y Combinator and a variety of angel investors, including Instacart co-founder Max Mullen, Dropbox co-founder Arash Ferdowsi, and WePay co-founder Richard Aberman. 

Gumloop was founded in April 2023 by McGill University classmates Max Brodeur-Urbas and Rahul Behal under the name AgentHub. The Gumloop team currently only consists of Brodeur-Urbas, Behal, and an intern. Brodeur-Urbas had previously worked at Microsoft and Oculus, while Behal previously worked as a machine learning engineer at Amazon.

As AgentHub, Gumloop went on to join Silicon Valley-based accelerator Y Combinator and participated as one of the few Canadian companies at its Winter 2024 demo day. Demo day allows the more than 200 participating companies from around the world to pitch ideas to a group of investors and media.

RELATED: Meet the Y Combinator Winter 2024 cohort startups with Canadian roots

The platform started as a side project for a small group of users in a Discord community looking to use AI to automate mundane digital tasks. Gumloop’s earliest version was a “simple UI wrapper” around an autonomous agent framework called AutoGPT before the company started  work on its own automation framework, according to its company handbook

Gumloop users can automate workflows by connecting relevant integrations like Google Sheets, Slack, YouTube, websites, emails, and more, then providing instructions for what data or information needs to be taken from one and integrated into another. For example, users can ask Gumloop to identify PDFs in an email inbox and extract invoice information into a Google Sheet. Gumloop also provides a number of workflow templates, such as for meeting preparation or converting the transcript of a YouTube video into a blog post. 

Following this funding, Gumloop is now looking to grow its team but “stay lean,” Brodeur-Urbas said in a statement. In its company handbook, Gumloop said it hopes to be a team of four by the end of the year. 

Feature image courtesy Y Combinator.

The post Y Combinator grad Gumloop secures $3.1 million in seed funding to grow no-code automation tool first appeared on BetaKit.

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