The customer service industry has spent two years being warned about AI. Now a small Y Combinator-backed startup is turning that warning into a business model, replacing entire support teams at the companies it signs as clients rather than selling them software to help their existing staff cope.
14.ai has raised $3 million in seed funding led by Y Combinator, with participation from General Catalyst, Base Case Capital, SV Angel, and the founders of Dropbox, Slack, Replit, and Vercel.
The investor list signals that the people who built the last generation of startup infrastructure believe the next generation will need its customer operations handled very differently.
The company was founded by Marie Schneegans and Michael Fester, a married couple who met in Paris more than a decade ago and built separate companies before deciding to build one together in the United States. Schneegans was a co-founder at corporate intranet company Workwell. Fester previously founded Snips, a company that worked on local-first assistants for smart devices, which was acquired by Sonos in 2019. Their model is deliberately not a software product.
“We’re not building software for customers. 14.ai is an AI-native customer service agency. We combine software and services in one package. For customers, operating software is hard, especially for customer service. We take over their entire operation, and we use our own purpose-built stack for customer service,” said Fester.
The pitch is that startups can hand 14.ai the keys to their support operation and stop thinking about it. The company says it can integrate with a support system within a day and start clearing the support ticket backlog very quickly, monitoring tickets across channels including email, calls, chat, TikTok, Facebook, Telegram, and WhatsApp.
“We started working with a men’s health supplement company called Sperm Worms by a former YC founder, who had a lot of backlog of tickets. His team of customer service agents was in the Philippines, and they were not being able to clear tickets efficiently. We took over on Thursday morning, and by Thursday afternoon, we had cleared tickets from all channels like social media, SMS, email, chat, and voice,” said Schneegans.
“We are not just a support agency, but also a revenue growth engine because we capture all kinds of conversations early on for a client and get insights from them,” added Fester.
The company frames its offer as removing three line items from a startup’s balance sheet simultaneously: ticketing systems, AI software add-ons, and human labor costs. Current clients include luxury skincare brand Yon-KA, smart glasses maker Brilliant Labs, and lighting company Creative Lighting. The startup also runs GloGlo, a glucose gummies brand for Type 1 diabetics, as an internal experiment in fully autonomous AI operations.
