Inbenta CEO Melissa Solis—who built North Texas-based GIACT Systems from $300 to a $610M exit—talks AI deployment failures, customer culture, and who gets a seat at the table on the Women Disrupting Tech Podcast.
Inbenta said the executive team additions will help support its expansion in the North American market; further innovate its products and services; and boost Inbenta's brand awareness in key sectors.
Horizn co-founder and CEO Janice Diner, who will become Inbenta's head of marketing, says the acquisition helps set the AI platform apart from the "industry's text-reliant majority." The Horizn deal comes after Inbenta's announcement of its $40 million funding in January led by Tritium Partners and the official announcement of its Calif. to Texas move in March.
Two months after closing a $40 million investment led by Tritium Partners and naming Melissa Solis as the company's new CEO, Inbenta is planting its headquarters in Allen's One Bethany West. Solis, who previously founded and led Allen-based GIACT, made the decision to relocate based on Allen's city business support, a "strong talent pool," affordable cost of living, and more.
Requiring virtually zero data training and achieving a 90% correct answer rate, Inbenta's solutions are fully configurable, deployable within seconds, interoperable across multiple platforms, and perpetually advancing through billions of customer interactions across 35 languages, the company said.
"Inbenta's conversational AI is a game changer for any business that has to handle customer inquiries, whether simple questions or more complicated tasks," says CEO Melissa Solis.
North Texas is a big place, with plenty to do, see, hear, and watch. We scour the internet every week to find events and activities for you. As always, things may change at any time, so be sure to check the official website or registration page for the latest details....
Dallas–Fort Worth has become one of the fastest-growing business ecosystems in the United States. Major corporations continue relocating headquarters to North Texas, venture-backed startups are scaling, and entrepreneurs from across the country are increasingly choosing Dallas as the place to build....
North Texas is a big place with plenty of opportunities. Here’s a curated roundup of contests and competitions; accelerator and recognition programs; and resource and grant opportunities for North Texas innovators. ...
McKinney-based Mission Critical Group—an end-to-end power systems and solutions provider specializing in design, manufacturing, delivery, and lifecycle services—has made a strategic investment in WattEV, headquartered in Long Beach, Calif.
MCG said it will leverage WattEV’s field-tested power-conversion technology to redefine power delivery for AI factories through next-gen 800 VDC architecture....
North Texas is a big place, with plenty to do, see, hear, and watch. We scour the internet every week to find events and activities for you. As always, things may change at any time, so be sure to check the official website or registration page for the latest details....
Dallas–Fort Worth has become one of the fastest-growing business ecosystems in the United States. Major corporations continue relocating headquarters to North Texas, venture-backed startups are scaling, and entrepreneurs from across the country are increasingly choosing Dallas as the place to build....
North Texas is a big place with plenty of opportunities. Here’s a curated roundup of contests and competitions; accelerator and recognition programs; and resource and grant opportunities for North Texas innovators. ...
McKinney-based Mission Critical Group—an end-to-end power systems and solutions provider specializing in design, manufacturing, delivery, and lifecycle services—has made a strategic investment in WattEV, headquartered in Long Beach, Calif.
MCG said it will leverage WattEV’s field-tested power-conversion technology to redefine power delivery for AI factories through next-gen 800 VDC architecture....