Indian AI firm raises $54M to automate IT work

An Indian AI company just raised $54M to kill the work nobody wants to do Not chatbots. Not hype. It’s automating the boring stuff and that’s where the real money is While most founders are chasing the next chatbot hype wave, this company is doing something far less glamorous automating the repetitive, unprofitable work that clogs IT service providers Founded in Chennai, they’ve built AI that runs behind the scenes: detecting problems before they happen and closing tickets automatically The result? 200+ customers in just a few years, a growing US presence, and a lean team of around 60 engineers building at Silicon Valley speed SuperOps isn’t trying to “replace” IT engineers. It’s making them more valuable by letting them do the work clients actually pay for The agentic AI marketplace autonomously fix IT issues, triage tickets, and onboard clients It’s the routine stuff nobody else wants to touch. Clients have already seen up to 40% reduction in manual workloads While most AI companies are burning cash chasing consumer hype, this one is quietly turning boring into billion-dollar potential

Saša Savić

I code, therefore I am. Sleep minimalist. Epistemic romantic. Perpetual coder. Efficienado™

2mo

So much words, yet you literally haven't told a single sentence of what they actually do, lol. A string of nonsensical words.

Chirag Maliwal 🇮🇳

Vibe Code Cleanup Specialist | AI Agent & Blockchain Developer | Full-Stack Python Engineer | Development Team Lead | Devpreneur

2mo

This is a good reminder that real value in AI often lies in solving unglamorous problems. Automating the repetitive and invisible work may not sound exciting, but it’s where efficiency gains and customer trust are actually built. The companies that focus here usually outlast the hype cycles.

Priyabrata Naskar

SDE 2 Android - Zomato | Founding Android Engineer - Semaai | Android Developer | Kotlin | Jetpack Compose | Coroutines | Open Source | CIS Hackathon 2021 🏆 | Tech Advisor | Let's Build Together ❤️

2mo

What SuperOps exactly automate? Can you share some examples?

Suvajit Mukhopadhyay

Enterprise Architect (TOGAF), Data Architect & Data Scientist (AI & GenAI) | Banking, FinTech & Capital Markets| Core Banking Modernization| Cloud Architecture| Winner of 40U40, Next 100| Trainer and Mentor | Speaker

2mo

which company is this ?

Yashasvi Shailly

Chief of Staff @ AstroSure AI | Founder’s Office | I am fascinated by brands, hence talk about them

2mo

Why not tag them here?

Marco Maldonado

AWS and Kubernetes Platform Engineer at Cisco and proud dad by night.

2mo

Is his another builder.ai ? where instead of AI is actually humans?

Sudhir Menon G

AI Architect and Enablement | Pre Sales and Solution Leadership | Learning Evangelist and Advisor | Conscious AI Research | Building YoctoAble - Neurodivergent Platform | Ex-AWS, Microsoft, Oracle, Wipro

2mo

Cool, AI that eats boring work is the real unicorn. Chatbots can talk—this thing actually shuts up and fixes problems., even though there are other startup working in the same space , human hate mundane, boring work , this is a big space to kick

Shani Sharma

Leading StigeUp in Developing AI That Moves Your Growth Forward 🌱

2mo

Exactly. This is the difference between building a feature and building an operating system. The "chatbots" are just features. SuperOps is building the OS for IT services. It's not about making a cooler UI; it's about fundamentally changing the underlying business model. Most VCs and founders still don't get this.

Sarthak Gandhi

Co-founder @ Persperence Envision (Acquired)| Business Strategy | Fundraising | Public Speaking & Networking | Consulting & Founder’s Office

2mo

What's striking here is the discipline — while most AI startups are burning capital chasing consumer hype, they’re attacking a pain point with direct P&L impact. Automating tickets and routine IT ops might sound boring, but it creates sticky adoption, lower churn, and clear ROI. That’s where billion-dollar outcomes quietly compound.

See more comments

To view or add a comment, sign in

Explore content categories