- Wonderful closes a $150 million Series B led by Insight Partners at a $2 billion valuation.
- The Israeli startup has raised $284 million total — just 13 months after its founding in early 2025.
- CEO Bar Winkler previously founded Approve, which was acquired by Tipalti.
- Wonderful deploys AI agents for enterprises across telecom, finance, healthcare, and manufacturing in 30+ countries.
- The company plans to triple its headcount from 300 to 900 by year-end.
$150 Million to Scale Enterprise AI Agents Globally
Wonderful has closed a $150 million Series B at a $2 billion valuation — nearly triple the valuation it reached just four months ago when it raised a $100 million Series A. The round was led by Insight Partners, with participation from Index Ventures, IVP, Bessemer Venture Partners, and Vine Ventures. Total funding now sits at $284 million.
Founded in early 2025 by Bar Winkler and CTO Roey Lalazar, Wonderful builds and deploys production-grade AI agents for large enterprises. The platform focuses on non-English-speaking markets across telecom, financial services, manufacturing, and healthcare — now operating in over 30 countries spanning Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America.
Boots on the Ground, Not Just Bots in the Cloud
Wonderful’s thesis is that enterprise AI does not scale through technology alone. The company sends local engineering teams — sometimes on-site — to deploy, integrate, and fine-tune its agents for each customer’s language, regulatory environment, and internal systems. Over 70% of its enterprise clients expand to additional AI workflows within three months, with agents reducing handling times by up to 60% and achieving 80%+ containment rates.
“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. The fresh capital will fund expansion to more countries and a hiring blitz — from roughly 300 employees today to 900 by year-end — as the company doubles down on its white-glove deployment model in a market where Intercom and others are also racing to own enterprise AI customer service.