General Catalyst has decided it wants exposure to Factorial in two ways at once. The Barcelona software company has closed a $150M Series D led by the firm at a $2.5bn valuation, and General Catalyst is committing a further $540M through a separate vehicle that ties its return to the value Factorial creates for customers rather than to equity. It is an unusual structure, and it makes the firm both a shareholder and something closer to a financing partner.
The equity round itself lands Factorial among the most valuable AI scale-ups in Europe and marks General Catalyst’s first equity cheque into the company, joined by Atomico and Four Rivers.
The valuation is up from the roughly $2bn the company was reported to be discussing in funding talks as recently as March, a brisk re-rating over a single quarter.
Factorial was founded in 2016 by Jordi Romero, Bernat Farrero and Pau Ramon Revilla, and built its business selling HR software to small and mid-sized companies. It now serves more than 16,000 businesses across 90 countries, employs around 2,600 people, and says it is hiring up to 50 staff a week, the kind of growth rate that tends to either justify a valuation or strain a company trying to live up to one.
The pitch attached to this round is a repositioning. Factorial is recasting itself from a software-as-a-service vendor into what it calls a “human-first AI Workforce Operations Platform,” the now-familiar move among enterprise-software companies to reframe existing products around AI.
The substance behind the language is whether the AI features change what customers can do, or mainly change how the company is described to investors. On that, the round is a bet rather than a verdict.
What is concrete is where the money goes. Factorial is naming Germany as its number-one international growth market and opening an office in Munich to anchor the push. That is a pointed choice.
Germany’s mid-market, the Mittelstand, is large, underserved by modern HR tooling, and notoriously hard for outsiders to crack, and committing a significant share of a $150M round to winning it is a clear statement of where Factorial thinks its next phase of growth lies.
The General Catalyst structure is the most genuinely novel element. Its Customer Value Fund lends against the value a company generates for its customers, with returns tied to that rather than to dilutive equity, a model the firm has been building out as an alternative to conventional venture funding for companies with predictable, recurring revenue.
For Factorial, it means capital to fund growth, customer acquisition in particular, without giving up as much ownership as a larger equity round would have cost. The round sits inside a wider European story the continent keeps telling about itself. Europe has been minting unicorns at pace, and a $2.5bn valuation for a Barcelona company that sells unglamorous HR software, rather than frontier AI models, is a useful counterpoint to the assumption that the continent’s only valuable startups are the ones building infrastructure. Whether it can hold that valuation depends on the same thing every scale-up’s does: turning a growth rate into a durable business before the market’s patience, or its own hiring pace, runs ahead of it.
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