Full-Time
AI-powered operating system for enterprise teams
No salary listed
San Francisco, CA, USA
In Person
Rhythms.ai builds an AI-powered operating system for teams inside companies. It provides a SaaS platform that helps product, engineering, sales, and customer-success teams understand, streamline, and coordinate their internal workflows—what the company calls “rhythms”—to boost performance and productivity. The system works by analyzing and orchestrating how work moves through an organization, offering tools to optimize processes and collaboration across departments in hybrid and AI-enabled workplaces. Unlike many software products that focus on a single function, Rhythms.ai aims to act as an overarching operating system for team workflows, helping organizations do more with less and achieve best-in-class performance. The company’s goal is to transform everyday business operations, drive higher performance, and bring joy to the way people work, using a subscription-based SaaS model for enterprises.
Company Size
11-50
Company Stage
Seed
Total Funding
$26M
Headquarters
Bellevue, Washington
Founded
2023
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Health Insurance
Unlimited Paid Time Off
Flexible Work Hours
Remote Work Options
Paid Vacation
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Wellness Program
Mental Health Support
Gym Membership
Professional Development Budget
Conference Attendance Budget
Stock Options
Company Equity
Phone/Internet Stipend
Home Office Stipend
Employee Referral Bonus
Relocation Assistance
Parental Leave
Family Planning Benefits
Fertility Treatment Support
GeekWire co-founders Todd Bishop, left, and John Cook open the 2024 GeekWire Awards at Showbox SoDo in Seattle on Thursday. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)After giving a nod to tech’s bygone era of gadgets and gimmicks, we celebrated the new entrepreneurs shaping the future of innovation in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest on Thursday night at the GeekWire Awards.The annual event, now in its 15th year, brought a sold-out crowd to Showbox SoDo in Seattle, where more than 60 finalists across a dozen categories competed for awards ranging from Startup of the Year to Next Tech Titan to Workplace of the Year, and more.Much like it has been for the past year, artificial intelligence was a recurring buzzword running through the evening, as evidenced by the number of finalists and winners seizing on the technology.“It’s an exciting moment and a transformational time in all our lifetimes because of the way generative AI has taken the industry by storm,” said Deal of the Year winner Madhan Subhas, co-founder of Seattle-area startup Rhythms.Rob McPherson sings his song about bygone tech onstage at the GeekWire Awards in Seattle on Thursday. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)But long before AI, the innovation of yesteryear was just as celebrated and equally instrumental in getting us where we are today. The “Land Before Tech” theme of the night had a prehistoric feel with dinosaurs and table centerpieces made of outdated VHS tapes, Polaroid cameras and more. It was all punctuated by a performance by Robert “The Drunken Tenor” McPherson. With lyrics set to Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire,” performing in front of a rapid-fire video montage, McPherson touched on seemingly every gadget or gizmo that ever seemed cutting edge to the majority of the people in the room.We threw it in a fire
Rhythms, an AI-powered enterprise productivity startup founded by industry veteran and serial entrepreneur Vetri Vellore, today announced $26 million