
Atomicwork
Atomicwork is a technology company.
Financial History
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M across 3 funding rounds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Atomicwork raised?
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.

Atomicwork is a technology company.
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M across 3 funding rounds.
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Atomicwork's investors include 11.2 Capital, Adams Street Partners, Battery Ventures, Blume Ventures, ENIAC Ventures, Vidu Shanmugarajah, Khosla Ventures, Nokia Growth Partners, Sierra Ventures, Storm Ventures, True Ventures, Walden Catalyst Ventures.
# Atomicwork: Agentic Service Management for the Enterprise
Atomicwork is an AI-powered service management platform that replaces legacy IT Service Management (ITSM) and Enterprise Service Management (ESM) solutions like ServiceNow.[1][2] Founded in 2022 and headquartered in San Francisco, the company serves enterprises seeking to modernize how they deliver employee support, streamline IT processes, and unify fragmented service workflows across departments.[1][2]
The company's core product addresses a critical pain point: traditional service management platforms are complex, slow to implement, and require specialized expertise.[1] Atomicwork solves this by offering a modern, AI-native alternative centered on Atom, a universal AI agent that automates routine support requests, deflects tickets, and enables employees to self-serve through natural language interactions via Slack, Teams, email, and voice.[3][5] The platform consolidates IT, HR, Finance, and Legal workflows into a single system while maintaining team-specific customization and security controls.[2][4]
Atomicwork emerged in 2022 during a period of accelerating enterprise AI adoption and growing dissatisfaction with decades-old ITSM incumbents.[2] The company has secured significant backing from top-tier venture investors, raising $25 million in a Series A round co-led by Khosla Ventures and Z47, signaling strong confidence in its AI-first approach to service management.[2] This funding validates the market's appetite for modern alternatives to entrenched players in the ITSM space.
Early customer traction demonstrates product-market fit: enterprises like Zuora have deployed Atomicwork and replaced multiple incumbent solutions within six weeks, achieving significant improvements in ticket deflection, self-service adoption, and employee experience.[1][5] These rapid implementations and measurable ROI stand in stark contrast to the weeks or months required by legacy systems, positioning Atomicwork as a credible disruptor.
Atomicwork rides several converging trends reshaping enterprise software. First, the AI agent revolution is enabling software to handle complex, multi-step workflows autonomously—a capability that legacy ITSM platforms, built before modern AI, cannot easily retrofit.[3] Second, the shift toward employee experience reflects broader recognition that IT and HR are strategic functions, not cost centers, making modern tooling a competitive advantage.[1] Third, the consolidation of point solutions into unified platforms reduces complexity and total cost of ownership, favoring nimble challengers over incumbents burdened by legacy architecture.
The timing is critical: ServiceNow and similar incumbents dominate through inertia and switching costs, but their complexity and slow innovation cycles create an opening for purpose-built AI-native alternatives. Atomicwork's positioning directly challenges this status quo, demonstrating that enterprises will migrate if the value proposition is compelling enough—faster implementation, lower complexity, and superior AI-driven automation.
Atomicwork is well-positioned to capture meaningful market share in the multi-billion-dollar ITSM/ESM space by offering a genuinely modern alternative to aging incumbents. The company's early traction, strong investor backing, and focus on agentic AI—a capability that will only become more central to enterprise software—suggest sustained momentum.
The critical question ahead is scale: can Atomicwork expand beyond early adopters to enterprise-wide deployments, and can it maintain its simplicity advantage as it adds features to compete with ServiceNow's breadth? Success likely depends on deepening integrations with the broader enterprise stack, expanding its AI capabilities, and building a partner ecosystem. If Atomicwork executes well, it could redefine service management for the AI era—much as Slack redefined workplace communication and Figma transformed design collaboration.
Atomicwork has raised $39.0M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $25.0M Series A in January 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1, 2025 | $25.0M Series A | 11.2 Capital, Adams Street Partners, Battery Ventures, Blume Ventures, ENIAC Ventures, Vidu Shanmugarajah, Khosla Ventures, Nokia Growth Partners, Sierra Ventures, Storm Ventures, True Ventures, Walden Catalyst Ventures, Mark Weatherford | |
| Sep 1, 2024 | $3.0M Seed | 11.2 Capital, Sierra Ventures, Storm Ventures, Mark Weatherford | |
| Sep 1, 2023 | $11.0M Seed | 11.2 Capital, Blume Ventures, Nokia Growth Partners, Sierra Ventures, Storm Ventures, True Ventures, Walden Catalyst Ventures, Mark Weatherford |