
AI-powered search is rapidly emerging as one of the hottest bets in consumer artificial intelligence, drawing huge funding rounds and ambitious new players even as Google and OpenAI try to define the next era of online discovery.
Google signalled a major shift this week, outlining plans to rework its long-dominant Search product around an AI-driven experience. But the company is far from alone. A new wave of startups and established platforms is racing to rethink how people find information, products and content online.
Bloomberg reports that Exa Labs, backed by venture firm Andreessen Horowitz, has raised $250 million at a $2.5 billion valuation to attack the AI search market. The company is one of several young firms positioning themselves as alternatives or complements to Big Tech’s offerings.
Other startups in this emerging cohort include Tavily, TinyFish and Parallel Web Systems. Parallel stands out for its leadership and backing; it is led by former Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal and recently raised $100 million at a $2 billion valuation in a round led by Sequoia Capital, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Together, these companies are trying to transform how search works, betting that generative AI can deliver more conversational, context-aware and personalised results than traditional keyword-based engines. Their traction with venture capital underscores how attractive AI search has become within consumer AI, even as the space remains crowded and highly competitive.
The rush is not limited to startups. Established tech platforms including Amazon, LinkedIn and Reddit are also turning to AI to overhaul search and discoverability on their services. By weaving AI deeper into how users navigate their content and products, these companies are looking to make search more relevant and to keep users engaged for longer.
This parallel push from both startups and large platforms sets up a dynamic market. For younger companies like Exa, Tavily, TinyFish and Parallel, the interest from Amazon, LinkedIn and Reddit in AI-enhanced search also creates a pool of potential acquirers if any startup decides to sell or seeks strategic alignment.
At the same time, the incumbents that defined the previous generation of search are adapting in different ways. OpenAI’s ChatGPT has become one of the most important interfaces for AI-powered queries, handling the bulk of AI search-style interactions before Google’s latest AI Search plans were unveiled. ChatGPT effectively owns a large share of the interface layer where users ask complex questions and receive synthesized answers.
Yet there are constraints on both of the biggest players. OpenAI is not able to make Search its sole or primary focus, given its broader product and research agenda. Google, meanwhile, must balance any disruptive AI shift with the need to protect its lucrative advertising business, which has long been tied to the structure of traditional search results.
Those pressures could leave room for smaller labs such as Exa or Parallel to carve out distinct niches. With fewer legacy trade-offs and a narrower scope, they may be able to move quickly into areas where incumbents are more cautious. The strong valuations and large funding rounds point to investor belief that there is still meaningful space for innovation in how people discover information online, even in a market long dominated by a handful of giants.
For now, AI search sits at the intersection of user habits shaped by decades of web search, the rise of conversational AI interfaces like ChatGPT, and the willingness of both startups and established platforms to rethink how results are generated and displayed. As Google’s new AI-powered Search experience rolls out and rival approaches mature, the balance between incumbents and newcomers will determine who controls the next chapter of online discovery.
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