U.S.-based AI workflow platform Atlantic has secured a new investment from the angel investor network Galata Business Angels (GBA) at a $5 million valuation.
The investment round included prominent GBA members such as Arif Akdağ, Kaan Boyner, Bülent Çelebi, Uğur Şeker, Ahu Büyükkuşoğlu Serter, Görkem Güven, Ata Uzunhasan, and other members of the network.
Atlantic said the new funding will be used to expand its customer base, grow its sales team, and accelerate product development efforts.
Founded in March by 17-year-old Rüzgar İmren and 18-year-old Ege Mustafa Çelik, Atlantic emerged from an idea the founders developed while still in high school. The company is building an AI-powered workflow platform that consolidates enterprise data scattered across multiple business applications into a unified intelligence layer.
The platform integrates with tools such as Slack, Jira, Google Workspace, and other workplace systems, analyzing emails, documents, tasks, and communication records to create what the company describes as a “corporate brain” capable of understanding how an organization operates.
By centralizing organizational knowledge, Atlantic enables employees to access critical information more efficiently while reducing information silos and coordination challenges across teams. Because the platform works with existing enterprise infrastructure, it aims to help organizations adopt AI-driven operations without requiring costly system replacements.
One of Atlantic’s key differentiators is its ability to combine enterprise memory with AI agents that automate business workflows. The company’s AI agents can analyze meetings, assign tasks to relevant employees, identify delayed work and alert managers, and coordinate processes across departments.
Atlantic also offers its proprietary Atlas family of AI models while allowing customers to utilize alternative AI models within the platform. With a strong focus on data privacy, the company employs an architecture that prevents customer data from leaving the organization and does not use client data to train its AI models.
Positioned at the intersection of enterprise AI agents, knowledge management, and workflow automation, Atlantic aims to help organizations transform operational complexity into intelligent, automated workflows.
