

Integrail Corp., an artificial intelligence startup that allows businesses to design and deploy AI agents more easily using a drag-and-drop platform, today announced it has raised $10 million in a seed funding round and the hiring of Peter Guagenti as chief executive to drive the rollout of the company’s solution.
Ratmir Timashev, co-founder of Veeam Software Group GmbH, a market share leader in data resilience that now stands a $15 billion valuation, led the round as primary investor.
Integrail allows businesses to create and deploy AI agents in minutes using a combination of no-code and no-integrations along with expert guidance professional services that the company calls a “zero to AI hero” platform. AI agents, part of an industry term known as agentic AI, make decisions, solve problems and use software tools with little or no human oversight. The company’s platform allows the orchestration of multiple AI agents to complete tasks.
“The term agentic AI is on everyone’s lips for an important reason; this capability will fundamentally change work by autonomously executing complex tasks across every line of business,” said Guagenti. “It is hard to overstate how big this transformation will be.”
Guagenti worked formerly as president of the AI code assistant developer Tabnine Inc., an early leader for AI assisted code completion, AI coding chatbots and AI agents for developers.
Using Integrail to develop AI agents, business users do not need to know any coding, modeling or engineering. The platform uses prebuilt agents as a starting point to provide custom agents via a simple user interface where users describe their work process and then define requirements and goals. The platform integrates external applications using a drag-and-drop interface and a simple application programming interface that can hook into Google LLC’s Gmail, Discord Inc., Microsoft Corp.’s services, Workday Inc. and more.
“There are low-value tasks being done in enterprises by contractors or employees today that will soon be delegated to armies of AI agents, allowing humans to focus on new and higher value work,” said Guagenti.
Examples of what agents bult by Integrail’s platform could be used for include analyzing contracts, preparing emails, HR tasks such as candidate screening, procuring and prioritizing marketing leads and assisting with development tasks such as unit tests and merges. Agents aware of business logic and systems could offload menial tasks allowing users to get down to creative business, Guagenti explained, all the while being cost-effective while doing so.
To distinguish itself from other platforms that also provide a very similar no-code experience for AI agent building, Integrail supports customer directly with experts, training, advice and professional services. With the new funding, the company said that it intends to seek out consulting partners to extend and bolster its expert-help capabilities.
THANK YOU