Generative AI has spread through companies at a pace rarely seen in software history, but despite the explosion of copilots and conversational assistants, the way work is organized has changed very little. Most uses remain individual and siloed inside private interfaces, with no real collective continuity. That is the gap Dust wants to address.
The company is now accelerating its push into multi-agent systems for enterprises, backed by a €34 million funding round. Dust’s bet is that the next step in enterprise AI is not just smarter personal assistants, but coordinated systems of agents that can work across teams and workflows. In other words, the value of generative AI will increasingly come from shared, structured collaboration rather than isolated one-to-one interactions.
The article does not provide further operational details, but the strategic message is clear: Dust is positioning itself around the limitations of current enterprise AI tools and aiming to build infrastructure for more collaborative, multi-agent use cases. The funding gives the company more room to develop that vision and compete in a market where many businesses have adopted AI interfaces without yet transforming how work is actually done.