A team of former engineers of Google, Adobe, and DeepMind have formed a supergroup and are going on virtual tour with Pomo, a new agentic marketing intelligence platform designed for mid-market. The platform has received $4.5 million in seed funding led by Kindred Ventures (that, despite the name, are not also a band), with support from other investors including Databricks Ventures, Seven Stars, and 645 Ventures.
The first round of investment was also backed by angel investors Mehdi Ghissassi, Scott Belsky, and Massimo Mascaro, each with experience leading AI and product teams. The money raised is set to “grow Pomo’s engineering and applied AI team, deepen its real-time market intelligence engine, and accelerate customer adoption,” according to a press release.
“We’ve watched marketing evolve step-by-step, moving from manual execution to AI copilots,” said Steve Jang, Founder and Managing Partner at Kindred Ventures. “Pomo solves a real operational problem: it consolidates market signals, surfaces competitive intelligence, and helps teams generate the deliverables they need, from product positioning to campaign strategy.”
Pomo aids decision making
Marketing is undoubtedly becoming faster but not always smarter. Teams can do more than ever but many struggle to decide what truly matters. With so many channels and results coming in quickly, marketers are pushed to make decisions in areas including performance and budget compliance.
This can lead to operational noise, and teams can become overwhelmed, spending too much time prioritising dashboards and one-off tasks with less time to focus on decisions that could genuinely improve results overall.
Pomo is purpose-built to combat such challenges, offering a closed-loop intelligence and decision support system that helps marketing teams. It monitors competitors and performance trends to highlight daily priorities and then suggest actions.
Praneet Dutta, Co-founder & CEO of Pomo, highlighted the platform’s abilities. “Marketing teams today are making more decisions, faster, in more channels than ever – but the tools haven’t kept up. Teams are buried under fragmented data and forced to make high-stakes calls without the full picture. Pomo gives them a unified intelligence layer that monitors what matters, recommends what to do, and helps execute in brand-safe guardrails, so smaller teams can operate with the precision and speed of a much larger organisation.”
Early wins with pilot partners
The Pomo marketing platform is currently being piloted with a small group of design partners, and early interest is reportedly strong, particularly from D2C brands and businesses in the hospitality and lifestyle sectors.
So far, early testing has demonstrated a range of features such as signal detection, where the platform identifies demand and competitor signals days before they appear in the brand’s existing tools. Users have also reported prioritised action plans and less need for manual research.
The Pomo platform provides recommended action plans and ready-to-use outputs that can be incorporated into a team’s workflow, which results in “less thinking and more doing,” according to the company.
Pomo’s latest agentic marketing intelligence platform could prove successful if pre-show soundchecks are anything to go by. However, it is yet to be seen whether early success translates into a sustained long-term performance during the course of a gruelling world tour.
(Image source: “Rock Concert” by motumboe is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
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