It is reported that Resolve AI, a company providing automated diagnosis and solution platforms for enterprise technology infrastructure issues, has recently achieved a corporate valuation of $10 billion (approximately 14.4 trillion won) through a round of financing. According to sources, this Series A financing is structured in multiple batches, and some shares seem to be trading at prices below this valuation.
According to reports, this round of investment was led by global venture capital firm Lightspeed Venture Partners, with participation from several anonymous investors. Resolve AI also received $35 million (approximately 50.4 billion KRW) in seed funding last year from existing investors such as Graylock, global AI expert Fei-Fei Li, and Google DeepMind's chief scientist Jeff Dean. Its two co-founders, Spiros Xanthos and Mayank Agarwal, previously sold their startup to Splunk in 2019.
Resolve AI provides a platform that identifies the root causes of issues based on technical data collected from various systems, such as cybersecurity tools, cloud infrastructure services, and business management solutions. This data is visualized in the form of a knowledge graph, which helps to understand the relationships between various infrastructure components at a glance. Users can configure the AIOps system to include only specific data sources or adjust the AI's operations for particular faults.
Once a problem is detected, Resolve AI generates hypotheses about various possibilities and deploys multiple AI agents in parallel to analyze the cause. For example, when a website goes down, one agent checks for DDoS attacks, while another agent tracks erroneous configuration changes. After the problem analysis is complete, the system automatically generates a timeline explaining how the failure occurred and suggests solutions. If the problem is caused by a misconfiguration, the platform also provides scripts to restore the configuration.
The platform can be used not only for simple problem solving but also in various infrastructure operation areas such as performance enhancement and cost-saving opportunity discovery, effectively helping new engineers familiarize themselves with the system. Resolve AI is one of the notable startups that has transformed fault response work, which was previously mainly manual, into an AI-driven model. In particular, this financing comes just a few months after fellow startup Wild Moose secured $7 million in funding, indicating the growing potential and increasing competition in the related market.