logo image
  • News
    • People Moves
    • Deal Wins
    • Demand Drivers
    • M&A and Funding
    • Financial Results
    • Technology
    • Academia
    • Industry News
    • Features
    • Machine Translation
    • — Divider —
    • Slator Pro
    • — Divider —
    • Press Releases
    • Sponsored Content
  • Data & Research
    • Research Reports & Pro Guides
    • Language Industry Investor Map
    • Real-Time Charts of Listed LSPs
    • Language Service Provider Index
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
    • SlatorCon Remote May 2021
    • Localizing at Scale for International Growth
    • Design Thinking May 2021
    • — Divider —
    • SlatorCon Coverage
    • Other Events
  • Directory
  • RFP Center
  • Jobs
MENU
  • News
    • People Moves
    • Deal Wins
    • Demand Drivers
    • M&A and Funding
    • Financial Results
    • Technology
    • Academia
    • Industry News
    • Features
    • Machine Translation
    • — Divider —
    • Slator Pro
    • — Divider —
    • Press Releases
    • Sponsored Content
  • Data & Research
    • Research Reports & Pro Guides
    • Language Industry Investor Map
    • Real-Time Charts of Listed LSPs
    • Language Service Provider Index
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
    • SlatorCon Remote May 2021
    • Localizing at Scale for International Growth
    • Design Thinking May 2021
    • — Divider —
    • SlatorCon Coverage
    • Other Events
  • Directory
  • RFP Center
  • Jobs

Register Now for SlatorCon Remote on May 13th!

  • Slator Market Intelligence
  • Slator Advertising Services
  • Slator Advisory
  • Login
Search
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Advertisement
AI Agency Language I/O Closes USD 5m Series A; Expands Focus Beyond Chat, Email

1 month ago

March 23, 2021

AI Agency Language I/O Closes USD 5m Series A; Expands Focus Beyond Chat, Email

M&A and Funding ·

by Marion Marking

On March 23, 2021

1 month ago
M&A and Funding ·

by Marion Marking

On March 23, 2021

AI Agency Language I/O Closes USD 5m Series A; Expands Focus Beyond Chat, Email

US-based AI agency Language I/O announced, on March 23, 2021, that it had closed a USD 5m funding round. Led by Massachusetts venture capitalists Bob Davoli (Gutbrain Ventures) and Bruce Clarke (PBJ Capital), the round also drew previous investor Golden Seeds, and new VCs such as Omega Venture Partners, Michael Wilens, Tom Axbey, and Eric Schnadig.

Language I/O CEO, Heather Morgan Shoemaker, said the series A, which closed on February 5, 2021, brought total funds raised to USD 5.62m. She declined to disclose the valuation.

Shoemaker told Slator the funds will go toward expanding the team (“We are already hiring data scientists / ML engineers to build out our existing machine learning platform”) and marketing and sales activities.

Advertisement

The CEO added that she and Chief Business Officer, Kaarina Kvaavik, “went from jointly owning over 95% of the company to jointly owning just over 50% of the company. But we maintain majority ownership for now.”

Investors Bob Davoli and Tom Axbey will join Shoemaker and Kvaavik on the Language I/O board, which will elect a chairperson in April.

Language industry M&A and Funding Report product

Slator 2020 Language Industry M&A and Funding Report

Data and Research, Slator reports
40 pages on translation, localization industry M&A, venture funding. Valuations, PE funds, deal rationale, geo, investment theses.
$490 BUY NOW

Scaling With AI, Not Humans

Language I/O (LIO) has 22 full-time employees, many located in Wyoming where the company is headquartered. They also have a large team in the Boston area, a few FTEs located in California, and a couple outside the US.

The data scientists they are in the process of recruiting will work on what Shoemaker called “our self-improving glossary, [which] automatically detects terms in company chats / emails that require company-specific translation.”

LocJobs.com I Recruit Talent. Find Jobs

LocJobs is the new language industry talent hub, where candidates connect to new opportunities and employers find the most qualified professionals in the translation and localization industry. Browse new jobs now.

LocJobs.com I Recruit Talent. Find Jobs

She said that while LIO is currently focused on customer support — that is, “enabling companies to use their monolingual customer support agents to chat and email with customers in any language” — the new funds will be used for “expanding our core tech beyond customer support.”

According to the CEO, Language I/O is an AI agency in every sense — which, based on Tomasz Tunguz’s investment thesis as shared with the SlatorCon San Francisco 2019 audience and a 2020 Forbes article cited by Shoemaker — relies on AI to scale rather humans, replacing some jobs with software.

“We integrate with numerous NMT engines — and we don’t train them; we hit the general engine and impose a company’s preferred translations of problematic segments atop the general translation”

What LIO does is basically to customize machine translation engines for companies by homing in on so-called “problematic segments.”

Shoemaker explained: “Today, to provide NMT [neural machine translation] that generates accurate translation for a specific business, most of the language industry trains a single model for each language pair. This requires a large corpus of human-translated content and linguistic expertise to train and iterate on the model.

Slator 2021 Data-for-AI Market Report

Slator 2021 Data-for-AI Market Report

Data and Research, Slator reports
44-pages on how LSPs enter and scale in AI Data-as-a-service. Market overview, AI use cases, platforms, case studies, sales insights.
$380 BUY NOW

“We determined early on that this was not a scalable solution. Instead, we integrate with numerous NMT engines, provided that they are GDPR compliant, etc. — and we don’t train them; we hit the general engine and impose a company’s preferred translations of problematic segments atop the general translation.”

The CEO further said, “Our ability to employ AI to automatically detect problematic segments, generate the preferred translations for those segments, and impose them atop the general engine is unique and lies at the core of our solution. It’s also what throws us into the category of AI agency as we are employing AI to do the bulk of this work, not humans.”

Markets and Pricing

LIO works with single-language vendors (SLVs) and directly hires freelance linguists for certain languages they “chose to staff up ourselves,” Shoemaker told Slator. “All said, there are hundreds in our network for the aspects of our work that require human translation, such as the MTPE [a.k.a. PEMT] of knowledge-base content.”

Slator Pro Guide Translation Pricing and Procurement

Pro Guide: Translation Pricing and Procurement

Data and Research, Slator reports
45 pages on translation and localization pricing and procurement, human-in-the-loop models, and linguist compensation.
$470 BUY NOW

She said they do not focus on any specific market segment but maintain a diverse client portfolio (e.g., travel, diesel engines, gaming, robotics, consumer electronics, online gambling).

Asked to describe LIO’s pricing model, Shoemaker said it is a tiered subscription with a cap on the number of words that a subscriber can translate through the Language I/O platform on an annual or monthly basis.

The CEO said they saw “a sharp increase in usage during Covid as companies looked for a technology alternative to staffing up operationally” — to the extent that the company’s monthly recurring revenue doubled from August 2020 to today.

Image: Language I/O Co-founders Kaarina Kvaavik (L), CBO, and Heather Morgan Shoemaker, CEO

TAGS

AI agencyBob DavoliBruce ClarkeEric SchnadigGolden SeedsGutbrain VenturesHeather Morgan ShoemakerKaarina KvaavikLanguage I/OLIOMichael WilensOmega Venture PartnersPBJ CapitalTom Axbey
SHARE
Marion Marking

By Marion Marking

Slator consultant and corporate communications professional who enjoys exploring Asian cities.

Advertisement

SUBSCRIBE TO THE SLATOR WEEKLY

Language Industry Intelligence
In Your Inbox. Every Friday

SUBSCRIBE

SlatorSweepSlatorPro
ResearchRFP CENTER

PUBLISH

PRESS RELEASEDIRECTORY LISTING
JOB ADEVENT LISTING

Bespoke advisory including speaking, briefings and M&A

SLATOR ADVISORY
Advertisement

Featured Reports

See all
Pro Guide: Translation Pricing and Procurement

Pro Guide: Translation Pricing and Procurement

by Slator

Slator 2020 Language Industry M&A and Funding Report

Slator 2020 Language Industry M&A and Funding Report

by Slator

Slator 2021 Data-for-AI Market Report

Slator 2021 Data-for-AI Market Report

by Slator

Slator 2020 Medtech Translation and Localization Report

Slator 2020 Medtech Translation and Localization Report

by Slator

Press Releases

See all
GET IT Consolidates its Agreement with XTRF to Foster Growth and Ensure Business Excellence

GET IT Consolidates its Agreement with XTRF to Foster Growth and Ensure Business Excellence

by XTRF

MasterWord Services Inc. Names Jeanette Stewart as Vice President of Operations

MasterWord Services Inc. Names Jeanette Stewart as Vice President of Operations

by MasterWord

XTRF Welcomes Roberto Ganzerli to Its Advisory Board

XTRF Welcomes Roberto Ganzerli to Its Advisory Board

by XTRF

Upcoming Events

See All
  1. SlatorCon Remote May 2021

    by Slator

    · May 13 @ 3:00 pm - 8:00 pm

    A rich online conference which brings together our research and network of industry leaders.

    More info $110

Featured Companies

See all
Sunyu Transphere

Sunyu Transphere

Text United

Text United

Memsource

Memsource

Wordbank

Wordbank

Protranslating

Protranslating

SeproTec

SeproTec

Versacom

Versacom

Smartling

Smartling

XTM International

XTM International

Translators without Borders

Translators without Borders

STAR Group

STAR Group

memoQ Translation Technologies

memoQ Translation Technologies

Advertisement

Popular articles

The Slator 2021 Language Service Provider Index

The Slator 2021 Language Service Provider Index

by Slator

Google Translate Not Ready for Use in Medical Emergencies But Improving Fast — Study

Google Translate Not Ready for Use in Medical Emergencies But Improving Fast — Study

by Seyma Albarino

Why Netflix Shut Down Its Translation Portal Hermes

Why Netflix Shut Down Its Translation Portal Hermes

by Esther Bond

SlatorPod: The Weekly Language Industry Podcast

connect with us

footer logo

Slator makes business sense of the language services and technology market.

Our Company

  • Support
  • About us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Subscribe to the Slator Weekly

Language Industry Intelligence
In Your Inbox. Every Friday

© 2021 Slator. All rights reserved.

Sign up to the Slator Weekly

Join over 13,800 subscribers and get the latest language industry intelligence every Friday

Your information will never be shared with third parties. No Spam.