Tech
Omniscient raises $4.1M to replace 150 fragmented intelligence tools
Paris-based Omniscient ingests 100,000+ sources, press, social, web, video, audio, internal pipelines, and synthesises them into a two-minute executive briefing. Renault is an early client. A global syndicate spanning France, Japan, and the US backed the round.
Omniscient, the Paris-based decision intelligence platform built for boards and senior executives, has raised $4.1 million in pre-seed funding led by Seedcamp.
Additional investors include Drysdale, Plug and Play, MS&AD, Raise, Anamcara, and xdeck, with Bpifrance also participating. The company was co-founded by Arnaud d’Estienne, who serves as CEO, and Mehdi Benseghir, both formerly of McKinsey.
The problem Omniscient is addressing is specific: large organisations manage more than 150 disparate intelligence platforms, each covering a different channel, geography, or function, with no single view of what matters.
Communications and intelligence teams are built to react to crises rather than anticipate them. By the time a significant signal surfaces through manual monitoring, the moment for proactive response has often passed.
Corporate reputation represents an average of approximately 30% of market capitalisation for the world’s largest listed companies, according to widely cited research.
A signal missed hours too late can mean billions wiped from market value before a communications team has even convened.
Omniscient’s platform ingests data from more than 100,000 sources across press, social media, web, video, audio, and internal pipelines, then synthesises that into a two-minute executive briefing updated in real time.
At the core is a proprietary architecture of specialist AI agents, each covering a defined domain, stories, regulation, supply chain, competition, that feed into a unified management cockpit.
The platform is designed for C-level users rather than analysts: no manual configuration, natural language interaction throughout, and a system that grows more attuned to an organisation’s priorities with use.
Renault is named as an early client. The company claims its AI-native approach is 50 times faster than legacy manual monitoring workflows, a benchmark derived from its own assessments.
The funding will go to engineering hires, product development, and commercial rollout. The roadmap extends into predictive analytics: the platform aims to tell organisations not just what is happening but what is likely to happen next and what to do about it, drawing on historical precedent, competitor behaviour, and real-time signal patterns.
Sia Houchangnia, Partner at Seedcamp, described Omniscient as “technically differentiated and commercially validated from day one,” pointing to the calibre of early design partners as the signal.
The investor syndicate spans France, Japan, and the United States, with Bpifrance’s involvement adding a French state-backed dimension to a round that is otherwise built around global fintech and deep tech specialist investors.
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