SynthBee emerges from stealth with $100M in funding to bring collaborative intelligence to regulated industries
A new enterprise intelligence company is stepping out of the shadows with a serious war chest and an ambitious goal: change how high-stakes industries turn ideas into real-world systems.
SynthBee, a previously stealth startup, has secured $100 million in funding led by Crosspoint Capital Partners. The round follows an earlier $20 million seed investment and an additional $80 million closed just last week, marking one of the larger quiet build-ups now coming into view in enterprise AI.
The company is developing what it calls a Collaborative Intelligence (CI™) platform for organizations that operate in environments where failure is not an option. Think medical technology, healthcare systems, aerospace and defense programs, advanced manufacturing lines, automotive engineering, financial services infrastructure, and media operations that rely on precision and accountability. These are environments where speed matters, but control, privacy, and traceability matter more.
Crosspoint’s leadership says that balance is what drew them in.
“At Crosspoint, we were blown away by the power of the business case for the customer. The value proposition and time-to-value cannot be ignored,” said Andre Fuetsch, Managing Director, Crosspoint Capital. “We’re incredibly excited about what the SynthBee team has created, its cohort of industry-leading customers, and the scale of the opportunity ahead. The team has invented a new way for organizations to harness intelligence at speed and with confidence. SynthBee’s differentiated CI™ platform is precisely the kind of bold, grounded innovation Crosspoint [Capital] wants to back for the long term.”
SynthBee’s pitch is less about replacing people and more about keeping humans firmly in control while compressing timelines that once stretched for months or years. The platform is built to support scientific, engineering, design, compliance, and creative work in settings where auditability, privacy, and reliability are non-negotiable.
Magic Leap Founder Rony Abovitz’s SynthBee Lands $100M to Reinvent Enterprise Intelligence
Leading SynthBee is Rony Abovitz, a founder with a track record in high-risk, high-reward technology. Abovitz previously built MAKO Surgical, which was acquired by Stryker for $1.65 billion, and later founded Magic Leap, one of the most closely watched XR efforts of the last decade.
This time, the focus is squarely on enterprise systems that sit deep inside regulated industries.
“SynthBee’s customers operate in mission-critical, high-performance areas across complex, regulated markets,” Abovitz said. “Our proprietary CI™ platform empowers businesses to solve complex scientific, engineering, design, compliance and creative challenges at extreme speed, with high accuracy, high privacy, high reliability, under human control and with clear auditability. This investment enables us to deepen our work with businesses across numerous vertical markets that require secure, high-reliability systems for their most important engineering, manufacturing, and field operations.”
The funding will go toward expanding the CI™ platform, entering new markets, and adding talent as SynthBee moves from quiet development into wider enterprise adoption. For Crosspoint, the bet aligns with its broader strategy of backing foundational software companies across cybersecurity, privacy, infrastructure, and AI—areas where trust and execution tend to matter more than hype.
As more enterprises reassess how intelligence flows through their product and technology lifecycles, SynthBee is positioning itself as a behind-the-scenes partner for teams that need speed without surrendering control. Whether that approach becomes a new standard inside regulated industries is still an open question—but with $100 million now in hand, SynthBee has the runway to find out.

