Enterprise AI search company Glean says its annualized recurring revenue has surpassed $300 million, roughly tripling from $100 million 15 months ago. This growth rate makes Glean stand out among its peers as large tech companies accelerate their entry into the enterprise AI search market.
With increasing competition, income continues to grow rapidly.
Founded seven years ago, Glean is often referred to as the "enterprise version of Google." CEO Arvind Jain stated that in the early years, there were almost no direct competitors in this field, but as enterprise AI applications gained momentum, more and more companies began to invest in this area.
Currently, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic, Salesforce, and Atlassian are all developing enterprise tools similar to Glean. Jain believes that first-mover advantage still has value, but what's more important is whether the product is closer to the actual needs of enterprises.
The core selling point shifts to reducing AI spending.
Glean's main product connects internal enterprise software systems, enabling AI tools to perform searches, question answering, and task processing based on internal company data. Jain stated that this system relies on its understanding of the relationships between information within the enterprise, which is what the current AI industry often refers to as a "context graph."
According to him, this approach not only improves the quality of responses but also reduces unnecessary operations during model invocation, thereby lowering token consumption. For many companies that are rapidly increasing their AI investment, reducing the cost of model usage has become an important consideration during procurement.
Jain stated that one point that customers particularly value is Glean's ability to significantly reduce AI bills. This makes "budget savings" one of the company's most prominent selling points.
The pricing includes pay-as-you-go billing, and the $300 million figure is based on an annualized basis.
Glean currently offers customers several pricing options, including pay-as-you-go billing and a hybrid model combining a fixed monthly fee and model usage fees. Its clients include Databricks, Reddit, Pinterest, and Samsung.
However, TechCrunch points out that the $300 million figure mentioned by Glenn cannot be fully understood in the traditional ARR (Average Revenue Per Transaction) framework. This is because pay-as-you-go revenue fluctuates based on customer usage and does not possess the characteristics of a fixed renewal fee.
Therefore, this figure is closer to the annualized revenue run rate than entirely from strictly recurring subscription revenue. Glean was valued at $7.2 billion when it completed a $150 million Series F funding round last June.












