Thrive Global AI posts USD $2.5m sales, unveils tool
Thrive Global AI, a bootstrapped analytics software company based in India, reported USD $2.5 million in revenue in its first eight months of operations and secured USD $4.5 million in order bookings over the same period.
It also announced a Real-Time Analytics Module, described as patented technology that combines supply chain and marketing analytics with core business operations.
Founder Priyanka Aeron said the business is built to address challenges for brands operating across markets, including fragmented data and inconsistent reporting. Those issues can delay insights and weaken decision-making across regions and channels.
The platform processes customer data securely and often runs within a client's own cloud infrastructure to meet compliance requirements in some markets. It integrates with client systems and APIs, including marketplaces such as Amazon and Noon.
Product approach
Thrive Global AI builds and trains client-specific Large Language Models aligned with a customer's supply chain cycles, benchmarks, and internal definitions. Typical implementation takes two to three weeks.
The platform combines offline and online sales data into a single reporting layer. The company describes it as a company-specific AI assistant for operational and commercial decisions.
Use cases span inventory and marketing, including predicting stock-out risk and identifying higher-return investments. Customers also use the software for refill planning and marketing cost optimisation.
The company said brands using the platform have recorded 200% to 300% growth linked to improved capital efficiency, inventory control, and marketing timing. It did not name customers or explain how those outcomes were measured.
Revenue mix
Thrive Global AI said it is profitable and has funded growth without external investment. It attributed around 80% of revenue to platform subscriptions, access fees, and brand management services.
The announcement comes as companies across consumer goods, retail, and eCommerce look for tools that connect demand signals with operational planning. Many brands are also under pressure to reduce manual reporting and unify data from marketplaces, direct-to-consumer sites, and offline distribution.
Aeron said the company is focused on embedding analytics into day-to-day operations rather than running isolated experiments.
"AI's future will not be shaped by who experiments the fastest, but by who integrates it the smartest. At Thrive Global AI, we are embedding intelligence directly into supply chains, capital strategy, and marketing to deliver measurable revenue outcomes. Our priority is decision intelligence that drives real business impact, not dashboards or short-term pilots. As governance frameworks evolve globally, the shift will move toward responsible, ROI-driven AI deeply integrated into operational DNA, not just digital ambition," said Priyanka Aeron, Co-founder & CEO, Thrive Global AI.
Next priorities
Thrive Global AI said its 2026 development focus will centre on enterprise-scale adoption, governance-led innovation, and sector-specific AI solutions. It plans to invest in data governance and AI systems designed for regulated industries.
It also plans to build decision-intelligence products aimed at improving operational efficiency and reducing unprofitable testing. The company said it has onboarded several organisations in "top international markets" but did not specify which regions or sectors currently contribute most to revenue and bookings.