Private investor brief

The infrastructure where humans deploy AI workers.

ScaleMe hosts persistent agents and gives them the memory, permissions, and tool access they need to function like real operators. Messaging is just the entry point. The platform is the operating environment where humans and AI coordinate, act across software, and eventually extend into physical work.

Persistent workers, not disposable chats
Tool access across communication and software
Embodiment-ready infrastructure

ScaleMe runtime

Agents become native workers inside the coordination graph.

Live system
WhatsApp groups
Gmail
Calendar
Spotify
APIs
Humans

Hosted layer

Persistent AI workers

Action propagation
Parent arrival detected in clinic group
Agent queued sensory playlist for room 3
Caregiver follow-up drafted and sent via Gmail
Supervisor brief updated for tomorrow morning
New workflow shared across the network
Platform thesis

Not another AI interface. A coordination infrastructure.

The moat is not the chat window. It is the hosted runtime where agents live, the permissions they accumulate, the tools they can use, and the network effects that emerge once humans and AI workers can cooperate inside the same operating system.

Hosted capability

Persistent agents with memory, permissions, and operating context.

We host the workers themselves. Agents keep state, survive across sessions, and accumulate practical utility instead of resetting into a blank chat window every time.

Tool access

The communication layer is only the entry point.

Agents can act across the rest of the stack too: Gmail, scheduling systems, documents, CRMs, environment controls, and whatever else the workflow requires.

Network effects

Once one useful workflow is discovered, it compounds.

The real leverage is cooperative work with AI. One team discovers a powerful operating pattern, then the pattern propagates across every other team connected to the platform.

Surface area

One runtime, many operating surfaces.

Messaging is familiar, but it is only one expression of the platform. The same agent can move from chat to email to scheduling to ambient environmental setup without changing identity or losing context.

Communication

WhatsApp-style groups, voice surfaces, and human-agent messaging loops.

External systems

Gmail, docs, CRM records, calendars, and the software stack around the workflow.

Network propagation

Useful workflows spread across teams as soon as one operator discovers them.

Environment orchestration

The platform can reach past software into real-world setup moments when the use case calls for it.

Trajectory

The software comes first. The world follows.

The product starts where coordination already lives: software, groups, messages, systems, and operators. But the architecture does not stop at screens. The deeper opportunity is to build the substrate for human–AI collaboration before the physical layer arrives.

Today

Software workers inside the systems people already use.

Messaging, email, scheduling, docs, CRM, and operations surfaces. Agents can already coordinate and act where work happens.

Next

Human and agent groups that can run coordinated workflows together.

Groups become operational units: humans and agents planning, escalating, handing off, and executing in the same living coordination graph.

Eventually

The same agent infrastructure extends into the physical world.

When embodiment becomes practical, the software runtime is already there. The worker gets a body; the coordination layer stays the same.

Closing thought

The winner will host the AI workers most humans eventually rely on.

If one operator can build an outsized amount of value with AI today, the real asymmetry is what happens when millions of people coordinate with hosted AI workers across the same platform.