AI is having its superstar moment. Headlines, demos, keynote confetti. But behind the velvet rope, there is a quieter question pacing the hallway. If AI is the new interface, how does it make money without breaking trust? AdZen just stepped into that hallway and turned the lights on.
In early 2026, AdZen announced the close of its Seed funding round, dated February 10, 2026, with a February 5, 2026 dateline out of San Francisco, California. The company emerged in 2025 as the first independent ad network designed specifically for AI agents, advertisers, and publishers. Not a recycled display network duct-taped to a chatbot. A monetization engine built for conversational AI from day 1.
Congratulations to Spencer Bardsley, CEO and Co-founder, and Brett Crosby, COO and Co-founder. Building infrastructure for an industry that is still defining itself requires a certain calm. The kind of calm that understands AI platforms need revenue, publishers need oxygen, and advertisers need outcomes that do not feel like surveillance theater.
The Seed round was led by Fiat Ventures, Inventus Capital Partners, and Silicon Valley Quad, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, Bain Capital Ventures, and NEA. Fiat Ventures will join the board alongside Spencer Bardsley and Brett Crosby. When capital with deep roots across Google, Meta, LinkedIn, AOL, Spotify, and YouTube backgrounds aligns around AI-native monetization, that is not random noise. That is pattern recognition.
Drew Glover of Fiat Ventures and Manu Rekhi of Inventus Capital Partners both underscored the same belief. As AI reshapes how people search, ask, and decide, legacy monetization models start to wobble. Organic traffic declines. Behavioral tracking tightens. Meanwhile, AI companies still have payroll. Publishers still have servers humming at 3 a.m.
AdZen positions itself as a neutral, third-party solution across AI agents and publishers, delivering privacy-safe, keyword-based advertising inside conversational experiences. Context over creepiness. Relevance over retargeting. The company is based in Sacramento, operating with a San Francisco pulse, aiming to reconnect brands, AI systems, and users without compromising the free web that built this ecosystem.
The funding will support team expansion, product development, and operational scale to meet rising demand across AI, advertising, and web publishing communities. No vanity metrics. No disclosed round size. Just a clear signal that the AI economy needs plumbing before it needs polish.
AdZen is not chasing attention. It is chasing alignment between intelligence and income. And in a market where everyone is teaching machines to talk, the real leverage may belong to the team teaching the conversation how to sustain itself.


