Natter, a London-based enterprise insights startup, has raised a $23 million Series A led by Renegade Partners. The round was confirmed to Axios Pro by co-founder and CEO Charlie Woodward, a former head of commercial partnerships at the BBC and business development executive at Uber.
The company expects to triple its headcount by the end of 2026. Prior investors include Asymmetric Capital Partners, Kindred Capital, Rackhouse Venture Capital, and Village Global, who collectively put in $10.5 million across earlier rounds.
Natter's product is built around a simple structural argument: surveys are cheap to run but produce shallow data, while focus groups are richer but limited in scale, and both are slow.
The platform replaces both with AI-moderated video conversations, designed to run across an entire workforce simultaneously. Participants join a session, are guided through structured prompts, and respond via video.
An AI orchestration layer then processes every conversation in parallel, identifying themes, sentiment, and priorities and returning a summary of findings within hours. The company says a seven-minute conversation yields more than 1,000 words of usable data, compared with around ten words from a typical survey response.
The platform can accommodate between one and 20,000 participants in a single session and supports both live and on-demand formats. There is no software to install; participants join via a browser link. Natter holds ISO 27001 certification and is compliant with GDPR, UK GDPR, and the EU AI Act.
The system redacts personally identifiable information at the point of transcription, which the company says creates a psychologically safe environment for honest feedback.
Use cases the company highlights include employee engagement, strategic planning workshops, product user research, sales coaching assessment, and training effectiveness measurement.
The positioning is squarely against the large employee survey platforms, and against the long cycle times those tools typically require. What used to take months through surveys, interviews, and analysis is the timeframe Natter is targeting for compression into hours, according to the Axios Pro report.
Natter was founded in 2021 and is based in London. The founding team, which also included executives from Google, Salesforce, and Deloitte, launched with a $1 million pre-seed round and initially focused on what it described as a virtual watercooler, a tool for facilitating spontaneous social conversations in hybrid and remote teams.
The product has since pivoted toward enterprise insight gathering at scale, with the AI moderation and analysis layer as its core differentiator.