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§ Private Profile · London, United Kingdom
Tessl is a technology company.
Tessl is pioneering spec-driven development, reshaping how software is built by using AI to generate implementations based on natural language specifications.
Tessl has raised $150.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Tessl has raised $150.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tessl has raised $150.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $125.0M Seed / Series A in November 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 14, 2024 | $125M Series A | Index Ventures | — | Announced |
| Mar 1, 2024 | $25M Seed | — | DocuSign, Redalpine Venture Partners, Youcef ES Skouri | Announced |
Tessl has raised $150.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tessl's investors include Index Ventures, DocuSign, Redalpine Venture Partners, Youcef Es-skouri.
Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) is a leading technology and automotive company specializing in electric vehicles (EVs), autonomous driving software, energy storage, and robotics. It builds products like the Model 3, Model Y, Cybertruck, Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, Powerwall, Megapack, Supercharger networks, and emerging robotaxi fleets and Optimus humanoid robots, serving individual consumers, fleets, utilities, and industries.[1][2][3] Tesla solves problems in sustainable transportation, energy efficiency, and labor automation by delivering high-range EVs (up to 350 miles), rapid 350 kW charging, AI-driven autonomy, and scalable robotics, with projected 2026 growth to 5.2 million annual vehicle deliveries (22% global EV market share), $180 billion revenue, and expansions into robotaxis and AI hardware amid $41.6 billion liquidity.[1][2]
The company's growth momentum is strong, pivoting from EV dominance to an AI powerhouse with robotaxi commercialization in 2026-2027, Optimus production for labor-intensive sectors, and energy storage cutting 10 million tons of CO2 annually, positioning it for exponential revenue via high-margin software and services.[1][2][3]
Tesla was founded in 2003 by Martin Eberhard and Marc Tarpenning, with Elon Musk joining as chairman shortly after and becoming CEO in 2008, bringing his background from PayPal, SpaceX, and early EV passion.[3][5] The idea emerged from Musk's vision to accelerate the world's transition to sustainable energy, starting with the high-end Roadster in 2008, followed by the pivotal Model S (best-selling plug-in EV in 2015-2016) and mass-market Model 3, which endured "production hell" in 2017-2018 but drove profitability and S&P 500 inclusion in 2020.[3][5]
Early traction came from Gigafactory builds in Nevada, New York, Shanghai, Berlin, and Texas, enabling global scale; by the early 2020s, Tesla had navigated EV market challenges, diversifying into energy storage and AI amid the 2020-2021 hyper-growth phase.[3]
Tesla rides the seismic shift from EVs to AI, robotics, and autonomous infrastructure, disrupting automotive, logistics, manufacturing, and public transport with robotaxi fleets, Optimus bots, and end-to-end AI ecosystems.[1][3][4] Timing aligns with maturing FSD, regulatory progress for unsupervised autonomy, and EV market "trough of disillusionment," where Tesla's diversification into 30% margin robotaxis and 25% growing energy storage provides resilience amid delivery slumps.[1][2][3]
Market forces like high interest rates, Chinese competition (e.g., BYD at 18% EV share), and demand for sustainable tech favor Tesla's $3 trillion market cap potential, global Gigafactories reducing tariffs, and Supercharger dominance, influencing ecosystems by enabling startups via autonomous capabilities and NACS standards.[2][4][5]
In 2026, Tesla scales robotaxi production (Austin/San Francisco launches), Optimus waves, massive AI datacenters, and energy growth, potentially hitting $280 billion 2027 revenue (55% CAGR) and $650 stock targets via recurring FSD/robotaxi income.[1][2][4] Trends like AI hardware (AI5 chips), humanoid labor disruption, and 95% renewable ops will shape its path, evolving influence from EV leader to AI/robotics dominator despite regulatory/margin risks.[1][3]
This evolution—from delivery-focused automaker to multifaceted powerhouse—redefines Tesla's $3 trillion potential, anchoring its 2026 transition in AI ambition over traditional car sales.[1][3]