AI Application-Layer Startup Radar — Week of May 16–22, 2026

AI Application-Layer Startup Radar — Week of May 16–22, 2026

Five AI application-layer companies — Sierra, EliseAI, Blitzy, Hightouch, and Vapi — raised a combined $1.6B this week. Covers round sizes, post-money valuations, lead investors, and founder backgrounds for each deal.

Five application-layer AI companies raised a combined $1.6 billion in disclosed rounds this week, led by two deals that signal contrasting bets on where enterprise AI value actually accumulates: one in the AI agent operating system, the other in the voice API infrastructure underneath it.

Sierra: $950M Series E at $15.8B valuation

Sierra — the enterprise AI agent platform co-founded by Bret Taylor and Clay Bavor — closed a $950 million Series E led by Tiger Global and Google's GV, with Benchmark, Sequoia, and Greenoaks participating. 1
Taylor previously served as co-CEO of Salesforce, CTO of Facebook, and co-creator of Google Maps; he currently chairs OpenAI's board. Bavor spent 18 years at Google, last leading Google Labs and the AR/VR division. Sierra builds AI agents that handle end-to-end enterprise workflows — insurance claims, retail returns, mortgage refinancing — for clients including ADT, SoFi, Ramp, Rivian, and Cigna. More than 40% of Fortune 50 companies are Sierra customers, according to the company. 2
The $15.8 billion post-money valuation prices the company at roughly 100× its disclosed $150 million+ ARR — a multiple that reflects how much investor conviction Sierra has built on the question of whether AI agents can reliably own full customer-service workflows, not just assist human agents. 3
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Vapi: $50M Series B at $500M valuation

Voice AI infrastructure startup Vapi raised $50 million in a Series B led by Peak XV Partners, with M12 (Microsoft Ventures), Kleiner Perkins, and Bessemer participating, bringing total funding to $72 million at roughly a $500 million post-money valuation. 4
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Co-founded by Jordan Dearsley and Nikhil Gupta — University of Waterloo classmates who previously went through Y Combinator with productivity app Superpowered — Vapi grew out of an AI therapy app Dearsley built in 2023. When they found more startup interest in the voice infrastructure than the therapy product itself, they pivoted to the API platform and launched publicly in 2024. 4
Amazon Ring evaluated more than 40 AI voice vendors before routing 100% of its inbound calls through Vapi's platform. The platform has now handled over 1 billion calls and currently processes between 1 million and 5 million calls per day, with enterprise customers (Amazon Ring, Kavak, New York Life, Intuit) accounting for the bulk of that volume. ARR is in the "healthy" eight figures, per an investor source cited by TechCrunch.
Vapi's approach — API-first voice orchestration with granular model-behavior controls — positions it differently from Sierra: Sierra sells outcomes-as-a-service across full workflows; Vapi sells the infrastructure layer that other builders (including Sierra's competitors) run on top of.

EliseAI: $250M Series E at $2.2B valuation

EliseAI, a vertical AI platform for multifamily real estate and healthcare communications, raised $250 million in a Series E led by Andreessen Horowitz, with Bessemer Venture Partners and Sapphire Ventures participating. The $2.2 billion valuation is up from $1 billion a year ago and follows the company crossing $100 million in ARR. 1
EliseAI automates resident and patient communications across text, email, chat, and voice — in seven spoken languages and 51 written languages. The platform handles over 1.5 million customer interactions per year for housing and healthcare providers and, according to a testimonial from Equity Residential, automated 90% of prospect workflows and contributed to $14 million in annual payroll savings. Founded in New York, the company has focused on two verticals where AI can replace high-volume but high-stakes communications without a human in the loop.
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Blitzy: $200M Series A at $1.4B valuation

Blitzy, a Cambridge, MA-based autonomous enterprise software development platform, raised $200 million in a Series A led by Northzone, with PSG, Battery Ventures, Jump Capital, Morgan Creek Digital, and Liberty Mutual Strategic Ventures participating — at a $1.4 billion valuation. The company is led by CEO Fynn Glover. 5
Blitzy targets legacy code modernization: it deploys AI agents that autonomously write, test, and migrate enterprise software without requiring developers to manage each step. The participation of Liberty Mutual Strategic Ventures — a corporate VC from a major insurer — suggests early traction in the financial-services-and-insurance vertical, where codebases are old and migration projects are expensive.

Hightouch: $150M Series D at $2.75B valuation

Hightouch raised a $150 million Series D led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives and Bain Capital Ventures, with Iconiq Capital and Sapphire Ventures also participating, at a $2.75 billion valuation. The round funds expansion of AI marketing automation, including predictive audience modeling and real-time personalization. 6
Co-founded by Kashish Gupta, Tejas Manohar, and Josh Curl, Hightouch started as a reverse-ETL data tool and has since repositioned as an AI marketing platform — syncing customer data to downstream activation channels and now layering generative AI on top of that data for audience building and campaign personalization.
The Goldman Sachs growth equity lead is worth noting: it places Hightouch in the same capital source category as late-stage growth companies preparing for a public market path rather than another private round.

This week at a glance

CompanyRoundAmountValuationLead InvestorFounders
SierraSeries E$950M$15.8BTiger Global, GVBret Taylor, Clay Bavor
EliseAISeries E$250M$2.2Ba16zUndisclosed
BlitzySeries A$200M$1.4BNorthzoneFynn Glover
HightouchSeries D$150M$2.75BGoldman Sachs, Bain CapitalGupta, Manohar, Curl
VapiSeries B$50M$500MPeak XVJordan Dearsley, Nikhil Gupta
Three of the five rounds — Sierra, EliseAI, and Hightouch — are late-stage deals (Series D or E) in companies already at or near $100M ARR. The two earlier-stage rounds (Blitzy at Series A, Vapi at Series B) are both in infrastructure or developer tooling, where investors are willing to move faster on lower revenue given clear enterprise traction signals like the Amazon Ring deployment.
For early-stage founders competing in any of these verticals, the deals clarify which applications are past the "wedge" phase and into scaled production: vertical AI in property management (EliseAI), enterprise agent platforms (Sierra), AI marketing data layers (Hightouch). Voice infrastructure (Vapi) and autonomous coding (Blitzy) are proving out category-wide with enterprise reference customers, but remain infrastructure bets rather than application-layer vertical plays.
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