Germany’s Synera raises $40M to scale “JARVIS for engineers” across Europe, the U.S. and APAC

The round and the plan
Germany-based Synera has pulled in $40 million in a Series B round led by Revaia, it has been reported that Capgemini, UVC Partners, BMW iVentures, Cherry Ventures and Spark Capital also participated. The cash will bankroll a push into the U.S., Asia‑Pacific and deeper into Europe — growth on three fronts at once. Bold move. High stakes.
What the company sells
Synera builds agentic AI that it says can autonomously execute complex CAD, simulation and optimization workflows — “JARVIS for engineers,” the company calls it. It has been reported that the platform connects over 80 computer‑aided design and engineering tools and can run on‑premises so proprietary data stays inside a customer’s infrastructure. The promise: stitch together siloed systems and make manual, legacy-bound engineering fast, repeatable and less error‑prone.
Market context and customers
The timing makes sense. Engineering is turning into a new frontier for AI as manufacturers hunt for speed and cost wins amid rising competition — particularly from China. Yet only around 41% of AI and generative AI prototypes reach production, according to Gartner, which helps explain why Synera is pitching agents that don’t just assist but execute. It has been reported that Synera counts more than 60 enterprise customers across 15 countries, including NASA, Airbus, BMW, Volvo, L’Oréal and others.
Why it matters
If the pitch holds up, Synera could be part of a broader shift from tool‑centric CAD workflows to orchestrated, agent‑led engineering. But can software replace the craft and judgment of senior engineers? Not entirely. What Synera is selling is scale and coordination — and in industries where margins and time‑to‑market matter, that is a very attractive proposition. The company has now raised $58.1 million in total to prove it.
Sources: siliconangle.com
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