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Wenite Raises €1.8M to Build Data-Driven Infrastructure for Europe’s HR Service Providers

Wenite, the Ghent-based startup building an AI-native operating system for HR consultancies, has secured €1.8 million to expand across Europe. The round, announced on 23 April 2026, includes €1.2 million in equity led by imec.iStart and a €600,000 syndicate of private angels drawn from the HR services sector itself.

Founded in 2021 by Jasper Dezwaef (CEO), Emiel Cracco and Robin Vannieuwenhuijse, Wenite is positioning itself as the unified back-end that Europe’s HR service providers — the consultants, well-being specialists and employer-branding agencies who sell into HR departments — have never really had. Its platform combines data collection, CRM, workflow management and AI-driven analysis in a single system, so that firms whose product is insight can stop stitching together spreadsheets, survey tools and generic project management software.

Inside the round

The equity portion of the raise was led by imec.iStart, the Ghent-based accelerator and early-stage investor that has seeded more than 300 Belgian and European deep-tech companies since 2011 and recently passed the €1 billion follow-on funding milestone across its portfolio. Imec.iStart’s standard ticket runs through a convertible loan alongside a full in-kind support package, and its portfolio companies have typically used the programme as a credibility signal into larger Series A rounds.

The second tranche is more unusual. Rather than raising the full ticket from institutional investors, Wenite topped the round up with €600,000 from private investors already operating inside the HR services industry — in effect, customers and domain experts betting on the category. That mix gives the company a structural commercial advantage at seed stage: the angels can open doors to the exact buyers Wenite needs.

“We want to become the backbone for European HR service providers looking to scale their business and make it data-driven,” said Dezwaef, framing the business as infrastructure rather than another point tool.

The category Wenite is going after

HR service providers sit in an awkward gap in the software market. Large HR suites such as Workday, SAP SuccessFactors and Personio are built for in-house HR functions at end-customer companies. Survey and employee-engagement tools address a narrow slice of the problem. Consultants and advisory firms who deliver well-being programmes, culture audits and employer-branding work to those same companies have mostly operated on a patchwork of generic SaaS — a CRM, a forms tool, a BI dashboard, a slide template — with no single system of record for client engagements.

Wenite’s pitch is to consolidate that stack: client CRM, employee data and survey collection, automated follow-ups, AI-assisted analysis and reporting, all in one platform branded to the consultancy’s own identity. Management estimates a European total addressable market of around 20,000 HR service providers, a figure that — while notional — is large enough to support a vertical-SaaS play if Wenite can convert even a minority of it.

The AI layer is the strategic bet. With enough client data running through the platform, Wenite can offer benchmarking, predictive turnover indicators and tailored intervention recommendations that a standalone consultancy could not produce on its own data alone. That is the familiar vertical-SaaS flywheel, and it only works at meaningful scale.

Use of funds

The capital will be deployed on commercial expansion and team growth. The immediate geographic focus is the Benelux and wider continental Europe, where HR services are a highly fragmented industry dominated by small and mid-sized consultancies. Wenite will also invest in product, deepening the AI analysis features and the platform’s workflow automation.

Where it fits in the European funding picture

Wenite’s seed arrives in a European funding landscape that has been unusually generous to vertical-SaaS and AI-native infrastructure plays in 2026. Figures from Crunchbase and Tech.eu indicate that Q1 2026 saw European venture funding grow roughly 30% year over year, with AI capturing more than half of the continent’s deal volume for the first time. Early-stage equity into work-tech and HR-adjacent companies has followed the broader trend: smaller tickets, cleaner syndicates and a preference for founders who can show domain embedding.

At €1.8 million, Wenite’s round is modest in absolute terms but well calibrated for its stage — enough to prove commercial traction in two or three markets before raising a larger institutional round. Imec.iStart’s involvement also provides a path into the Benelux corporate network, where Wenite’s target buyers are concentrated.

The next data point will be whether Wenite can land a handful of marquee HR consultancies as reference customers and demonstrate meaningful retention in the twelve months ahead. If it does, a Series A would plausibly follow in 2027, backed by the kind of European vertical-SaaS investors — Project A, Entrée Capital, Kennet — that have been circling the category.

For now, the round positions Wenite as one of the more thesis-aligned bets in European HR tech: a small, domain-native team building what its customers say they have been missing.

Source: Tech.eu — Wenite secures €1.8 million to power the future of data-driven HR

For more European funding coverage, see our Fundraising hub.

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