The Prompting Company has raised $6.5 million in seed funding to help brands optimize their content for AI-driven product discovery through generative engine optimization (GEO). The Y Combinator-backed startup addresses a growing shift where consumers increasingly turn to AI chatbots rather than traditional search engines for product recommendations, with retailers potentially seeing up to 520% more AI-driven traffic in 2025.
What you should know: The four-month-old startup is already serving major clients and processing millions of monthly visits through AI-optimized content.
- Current customers include Rippling, Rho, Motion, Vapi, Fondo, Kernel, and Traceloop, plus one Fortune 10 company.
- The platform hosts about half a million pages and drives double-digit millions in monthly traffic to client sites.
- Founded by Kevin Chandra, Michelle Marcelline, and Albert Punama, who previously built Y Combinator-backed companies Typedream and Cotter.
How it works: The platform creates AI-friendly versions of websites specifically designed for machine consumption rather than human browsing.
- It identifies purchase-intent queries by probing AI models to understand what questions agents are asking.
- Creates structured content that answers those questions and automatically routes AI agents to optimized pages.
- Eliminates human-focused elements like navigation bars, pop-ups, and marketing copy that confuse AI systems.
In plain English: Think of it like creating two versions of a restaurant menu—one beautifully designed for human diners with photos and descriptions, and another simple text file for delivery apps to read quickly and accurately.
The business model: The company uses a subscription approach based on tracking AI interactions and hosting optimized content.
- Customers pay based on the number of prompts tracked and pages hosted on the platform.
- The startup is exploring advertising and conversion-driven models as AI agents become capable of completing purchases.
The big picture: AI agents are becoming the dominant traffic source for websites, fundamentally changing how products get discovered and purchased.
- “Over the past year, most of the growth on websites has come from AI bots, not people,” CEO Chandra explained.
- Unlike traditional SEO that relies on paid keywords and search rankings, GEO surfaces products organically based on conversational relevance.
- Emerging protocols from Google and OpenAI’s partnership with Stripe could enable AI agents to complete entire purchase transactions autonomously.
Why this matters: As AI becomes the primary touchpoint for product discovery, brands risk invisibility if they don’t adapt their marketing strategies for machine consumption.
- A recent shopping report indicates Americans will increasingly use large language models for gift and deal discovery this holiday season.
- The shift represents a fundamental change in the purchasing funnel, where AI agents may eventually handle transactions without human involvement.
- Companies that fail to optimize for AI discovery could lose significant market share as consumer behavior evolves.
What they’re saying: Industry leaders recognize the urgency of adapting to AI-driven discovery channels.
- “If your product isn’t discovered or cited in ChatGPT, you’re ngmi,” said Arnav Sahu, partner at Peak XV Partners.
- “Most businesses still design websites only for humans, but the fastest-growing segment of users on the internet today is AI agents and they need a completely different interface,” Chandra noted.
Who else is involved: The seed round attracted prominent investors focused on AI infrastructure and enterprise tools.
- Peak XV Partners, Base10, Y Combinator, and Firedrop led the funding round.
- Angel investors include Logan Kilpatrick, a former OpenAI executive.
- The startup is collaborating with NVIDIA on next-generation AI search capabilities.
                The Prompting Company snags $6.5M to help products get mentioned in ChatGPT and other AI apps