Close Menu
primehub.blog

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Oldest Shell Jewelry Workshop in Western Europe Dates Back 42,000 Years

    September 28, 2025

    Pottery Barn Outlet End-of-Summer Deals Start at $6

    September 28, 2025

    Moonflow and Everything Dead & Dying

    September 28, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    primehub.blog
    Trending
    • Oldest Shell Jewelry Workshop in Western Europe Dates Back 42,000 Years
    • Pottery Barn Outlet End-of-Summer Deals Start at $6
    • Moonflow and Everything Dead & Dying
    • 38 Target Fall Must-Haves for a Cozy, Stylish Season
    • AI startup Friend spent more than $1M on all those subway ads
    • The ‘California of Europe’ Has Rolling Vineyards, Luxury Resorts, and 100 Miles of Coastline
    • Tiny Wi-Fi gadget smashes Kickstarter with $600,000 as thousands rush to back remote PC control innovation
    • Should you buy a Windows mini PC in 2025? My verdict after a week of testing
    • Home
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • DIY
    • Eco Living
    • Tech
    primehub.blog
    Home»Tech»Maisa AI gets $25M to fix enterprise AI’s 95% failure rate
    Tech

    Maisa AI gets $25M to fix enterprise AI’s 95% failure rate

    PrimeHubBy PrimeHubAugust 28, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Maisa founders David Villalon and Manuel Romera
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    A staggering 95% of generative AI pilots at companies are failing, according to a recent report published by MIT’s NANDA initiative. But rather than giving up on the technology altogether, the most advanced organizations are experimenting with agentic AI systems that can learn and be supervised.

    That’s where Maisa AI comes in. The year-old startup has built its entire approach around the premise that enterprise automation requires accountable AI agents, not opaque black boxes. With a new, $25 million seed round led by European VC firm Creandum, it has now launched Maisa Studio, a model-agnostic self-serve platform that helps users deploy digital workers that can be trained with natural language.

    While that might sound familiar — reminiscent of so-called vibe coding platforms like Cursor and the Creandum-backed Lovable — Maisa argues that its approach is fundamentally different. “Instead of using AI to build the responses, we use AI to build the process that needs to be executed to get to the response — what we call ‘chain-of-work,” Maisa CEO David Villalón told TechCrunch.

    The principal architect behind this process is Maisa’s co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Manuel Romero, who had previously worked with Villalón at Spanish AI startup Clibrain. In 2024, the duo teamed up to build a solution to hallucinations after seeing firsthand that “you could not rely on AI,” Villalón said.

    The pair isn’t skeptical about AI, but they think it won’t be feasible for humans to review “three months of work done in five minutes.” To address this, Maisa employs a system called HALP, standing for Human-Augmented LLM Processing. This custom method works like students at the blackboard — it asks users about their needs while the digital workers outline each step they will follow.

    Image Credits:Maisa AI

    The startup also developed the Knowledge Processing Unit (KPU), a deterministic system designed to limit hallucinations. While Maisa started out from this technical challenge rather than a use case, it soon found that its bet on trustworthiness and accountability resonated with companies hoping to apply AI to critical tasks. For instance, clients that currently use Maisa in production include a large bank, as well as companies in the car manufacturing and energy sectors.

    By serving these enterprise clients, Maisa hopes to position itself as a more advanced form of robotic process automation (RPA) that unlocks productivity gains without requiring companies to rely on rigid predefined rules or extensive manual programming. To meet their needs, the startup also offers them either deployment in its secure cloud or through on-premise deployment. 

    Techcrunch event

    San Francisco
    |
    October 27-29, 2025

    This enterprise-first approach means Maisa’s customer base is still very small compared to the millions flocking to freemium vibe-coding platforms. But as these platforms are now exploring how to win enterprise customers, Maisa is moving in the opposite direction with Maisa Studio, which is designed to grow its customer funnel and ease adoption.

    The startup also plans to expand with existing customers that have operations in multiple countries. With dual headquarters in Valencia and San Francisco, Maisa itself already has a foothold in the U.S., as reflected in its cap table; its $5 million pre-seed round last December was led by the San Francisco-based venture firms NFX and Village Global. 

    In addition, TechCrunch learned exclusively that U.S. firm Forgepoint Capital International participated in this new round via its European joint venture with Spanish bank Banco Santander, highlighting its appeal for regulated sectors.

    Focusing on complex use cases demanding accountability from non-technical users could be a differentiator for Maisa, whose competitors include CrewAI and many other AI-powered, business-focused workflow automation products. In a LinkedIn post, Villalón highlighted this “AI framework gold rush,” warning that the “quick start” becomes a long nightmare when you need reliability, auditability, or the ability to fix what went wrong.”

    Doubling down on its goal to help AI scale, Maisa plans to use its funding to grow from 35 to as many as 65 people by the first quarter of 2026 in order to meet demand. Starting in the last quarter of this year, the startup anticipates rapid growth as it begins serving its waiting list. “We are going to show the market that there is a company that is delivering what has been promised, and that it’s working,” Villalón said.

    25M AIs enterprise failure Fix Maisa Rate
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    PrimeHub
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Tech

    Oldest Shell Jewelry Workshop in Western Europe Dates Back 42,000 Years

    September 28, 2025
    Tech

    Moonflow and Everything Dead & Dying

    September 28, 2025
    Tech

    AI startup Friend spent more than $1M on all those subway ads

    September 28, 2025
    Tech

    Tiny Wi-Fi gadget smashes Kickstarter with $600,000 as thousands rush to back remote PC control innovation

    September 28, 2025
    Tech

    Should you buy a Windows mini PC in 2025? My verdict after a week of testing

    September 28, 2025
    Tech

    Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Sept. 28

    September 28, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Editor's Picks

    Oldest Shell Jewelry Workshop in Western Europe Dates Back 42,000 Years

    September 28, 2025

    Pottery Barn Outlet End-of-Summer Deals Start at $6

    September 28, 2025

    Moonflow and Everything Dead & Dying

    September 28, 2025

    38 Target Fall Must-Haves for a Cozy, Stylish Season

    September 28, 2025
    Latest Posts

    Cuts to ICB nurse leaders ‘risk patient safety’, RCN warns

    August 24, 2025

    TechCrunch Mobility: Waymo’s Big Apple score and Nvidia backs Nuro

    August 24, 2025

    How to Create Your Own Summer to Fall Transition at Home

    August 24, 2025
    Facebook Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    News

    • DIY
    • Eco Living
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Health

    catrgories

    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • DIY
    • Eco Living

    useful link

    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2025 primehub.blog. Designed by Pro.
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.