Speaking at the New York Stock Exchange, Humand’s CEO Nicolás Benenzon talked about the $66 million Series A and laid out why the biggest opportunity in enterprise software has nothing to do with desk workers.
There are 2.7 billion people who go to work every day without ever sitting at a computer. They stock shelves, run production lines, serve tables, and deliver packages, and for decades, the enterprise software revolution largely left them behind. Standing on the NYSE floor, Nicolás Benenzon made the case that this is exactly where the next chapter of AI belongs.
Work, finally designed for the people who do it
Humand operates as an all-in-one platform powered by AI where frontline employees can request time off, view pay stubs, complete onboarding, access training, and get answers to HR questions, all from their phones. The experience is designed to feel as intuitive as the consumer apps they already use every day.
The premise is simple: if you don’t have a desk, enterprise software was never really built for you. Humand is changing that.
AI that works as hard as your team
Humand already serves 2,000 companies, including Domino’s Pizza and The Home Depot, and supports two million daily active users. The platform is currently automating 50% of customer help desk tickets using AI and is the #1 rated and most downloaded app in its category on both the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.
Now, two new AI agents are pushing that further:
- Sammy, an AI help desk assistant that automatically resolves employee tickets such as shift changes, payroll questions, and benefits inquiries, in seconds instead of weeks.
- Coach Carla, an AI training builder that lets managers create full courses in minutes by uploading existing content or PDFs, eliminating the need for costly third-party consultants.
What’s next
The Series A will fuel Humand’s expansion from 2,000 to 10,000 companies, while the product roadmap focuses on embedding AI across every platform module, from performance reviews to goal tracking, to unlock a level of productivity the frontline workforce has never had access to before.
For the billions of workers the digital revolution forgot, the future of work is finally arriving, on mobile, and powered by AI.