Grammarly announced on Tuesday its acquisition of superhuman human email clients to build AI for its productivity suite. Neither company provided details regarding the financial terms of the transaction.
The Superhuman was founded by Rahul Vohra, Vivek Sodera, and Conrad Irwin. According to data from Venture Data Analytics company Traxcn, the company has raised more than $114 million in funding from its patrons, including A16Z, IVP and Tiger Global.
“In superhuman, you can deliver that future to millions of experts while still providing existing users with another surface for agent collaboration that doesn't exist anywhere else. Email is more than just an app. Experts are the perfect staging ground for coordinating multiple AI agents at the same time.
The agreement has moved CEO Vohra and other superhuman employees to Grammarly.
“Email is the main communication tool for billions of people around the world and the number one use case for grammar customers. Joining forces with grammar, we will invest more in the core superhuman experience and create new ways to collaborate with the communication tools that AI agents use every day.
Over the past few months, Superhuman has released AI-powered features related to scheduling, replies, and classification. In that announcement, Grammarly said he wants to use Superhuman's Tech to build an AI agent for email. The company said email is one of the top use cases in grammar.
Last year, Grammarly acquired co-productivity software Coda and promoted CODA co-founder Shishir Mehrotra to CEO as part of the deal.
In May, Grammarly raised $1 billion from General Catalyst in its undiluted investment. Rather than abandoning fairness, the company repays common catalysts and repays money at the rate of revenue caps it creates using venture money.