Bret Taylor, the former co-CEO of Salesforce (CRM), has built something significant in a remarkably short time. His artificial intelligence startup Sierra announced on Nov. 21 that it crossed $100 million in annual recurring revenue within just seven quarters of its early 2024 launch.
That's the kind of growth trajectory that gets attention in Silicon Valley, and it should. According to Sierra, its AI agents handle customer interactions for more than 95% of Black Friday shoppers across the United States. That's not a small claim during the busiest shopping weekend of the year.
Blue-Chip Client Roster Validates Enterprise Approach
Sierra has assembled an impressive list of enterprise customers that includes ADT (ADT), SoFi Technologies (SOFI), Wayfair (W), Rivian Automotive (RIVN), and Cigna (CI). These aren't experimental pilots with small companies testing the waters. Around 50% of the organizations using Sierra surpass $1 billion in annual revenue, while one-fifth reach more than $10 billion each year.
The company's philosophy differs from the typical customer service playbook. Sierra argues that while companies often focus on quick resolutions, deeper engagement requires sustained attention across many touchpoints. Sierra's goal centers on helping large enterprises deliver dependable service across daily interactions so clients feel supported throughout the entire journey.
Beyond Healthcare and Finance Into Mainstream Commerce
The platform handles a surprisingly diverse range of tasks. Identity checks for patients, product return support, credit card workflows, mortgage processes—Sierra touches all of it. Consider this data point: homebuyers using the Rocket Mortgage digital tool powered by Sierra's platform complete the process at a rate four times higher than other groups, according to the company.
Sierra said its reach covers a large share of key sectors within the United States. The company reported coverage that rises above 50% of the families receiving healthcare within the country. Sierra also said that its platform supports a significant portion of media-related activity and nearly three-quarters of core financial technology functions, spanning banking, payment systems, insurance work, and investment activity.
Memory Makes the Difference
What separates Sierra from basic chatbots is what the company calls its Agent Data Platform. This system stores context from past interactions, giving each AI agent a way to move beyond basic support tasks into areas linked to revenue growth, such as sales outreach, loyalty work, and long-term client retention.
The company framed this capability as a core part of how large brands can strengthen relationships through continuous, consistent service. It's memory that matters—knowing what a customer asked about last week, what they bought last month, what problems they've encountered before.
The platform operates across phone lines, interactive voice response systems, website chat windows, WhatsApp channels, email gateways, and more than 30 languages. Sierra also confirmed that users can place these agents on AI-centered distribution channels that include ChatGPT.
Built for Regulated Industries
The platform includes security controls and compliance layers designed to meet expectations in highly regulated fields such as financial services and healthcare. Sierra presented these features as essential for Fortune-scale organizations that manage sensitive data under tight oversight requirements. You can't just deploy AI chatbots in healthcare or banking without serious guardrails, and Sierra appears to have built those from the ground up.
Sierra raised $350 million in September through a round led by Greenoaks, a funding that placed its valuation at $10 billion. That's a remarkable valuation for a company that launched in early 2024, but the revenue numbers and client roster suggest investors see a genuine platform emerging in the enterprise AI space.