Humand Technologies has secured $66 million in new funding to accelerate the global expansion of its operating system for deskless workforces and advance its artificial intelligence development.

Founded in 2020, Humand addresses a critical gap for frontline workers, who constitute a significant portion of global employment across industries like manufacturing, healthcare, and logistics. Traditional enterprise systems are often ill-suited for employees without desk access, leading to communication and operational coordination challenges.

The company's unified mobile application serves as a central operating layer, connecting workers to core HR, communication, and operational systems. AI is natively integrated into the platform, offering natural language interfaces for requests and information retrieval, as well as AI agents to automate routine interactions and provide real-time support.

"Our goal is very simple: We want to become the default operating system for companies with deskless workers," stated Nicolas Benenzon, co-founder and CEO. "The majority of the global workforce has been overlooked by enterprise software for decades. We’re building the platform that finally gives them the same access, voice and digital power as corporate employees."

The Humand platform aggregates workforce data and workflows into a single mobile interface, integrating with existing HR and enterprise systems. It functions as both a system of record for people operations and a system of action for task execution and communication. Key capabilities include managing time-off requests, benefits access, performance feedback, internal communications, training, and document management.

Humand reports strong market demand, with over 1.6 million workers across more than 1,500 organizations already utilizing its platform. Notable clients include Siemens AG, Home Depot Inc., and Domino’s Pizza Inc.

The Series A funding round was led by Kaszek Ventures and Goodwater Capital, with participation from Y Combinator and Newtopia VC. Eric Kim of Goodwater Capital highlighted Humand's role in transforming workplace software into "dynamic systems of action."