Mega Raises $11.5M in Series A Funding to Expand AI Growth Engine
Somewhere between the chaos of small business marketing and the polished machinery of enterprise growth teams sits a painful truth. Most SMBs are told to compete in a digital arena built for giants while armed with a patchwork of freelancers, bloated agencies, and dashboards that promise clarity but deliver confusion. Enter Mega, which just pulled in $11.5M in Series A funding to bring some order to that circus. The round was led by Goodwater Capital, with Andreessen Horowitz, SignalFire, Atreides Management, and Kearny Jackson stepping into the mix. When a table like that pulls up chairs, it usually means the signal is louder than the noise.
Credit where it is due. Co founders Robbie Schneidman, Lucas Pellan, and Kevin Chen are building something that treats growth less like guesswork and more like an operating system. Mega positions itself as an AI powered growth engine that replaces the traditional marketing agency model with a network of AI agents handling SEO, paid advertising, and websites. The pitch is simple but sharp. Instead of juggling vendors, tools, and marketing consultants who swear the next campaign will be the one, SMBs get a single engine designed to generate demand and keep the pipeline moving.
The traction suggests the idea landed with the right audience at the right moment. Mega reportedly went from zero to $10M in revenue in just 10 months. That is the kind of acceleration that makes venture firms lean forward in their chairs. The customer base spans home services, law firms, healthcare businesses, ecommerce brands, and software companies. In other words, the exact operators who wake up every morning knowing they need leads but do not have the time or patience to manage 10s of thousands of marketing variables and tools.
What makes this story interesting is not just the funding, it is the shift in how services are delivered. Marketing used to be either software you had to learn or agencies you had to babysit. Mega is betting that AI agents can do both the thinking and the doing. Plan the campaigns, run them, adjust them, report on them. Less babysitting, more business building. It is the difference between handing someone a wrench and handing them a machine that builds the engine for you.
The new capital is aimed at expanding that engine further into the revenue stack. Think email, outbound, organic social, lead qualification, and sales operations all tied into the same system. If the vision holds, SMBs will not just buy marketing tools. They will plug into something closer to a growth infrastructure.
And when you zoom out for a second, you can see why investors lined up. 10s of thousands of marketing agencies chasing millions of small businesses is a crowded street. But a platform that turns growth into software driven execution starts to look like a highway.









