Enterprise AI has a stalling problem, and it is not the models. Companies have poured money into chips, private clouds, and pilot projects, then watched most of them stop before they ever reached production. A London company called Deliverance AI thinks it knows why, and on Tuesday it came out of stealth to sell the answer.
Founded less than a year ago, the company said it has reached £6m in annual recurring revenue, hired more than 30 people, and signed six enterprise customers within three months of incorporation. Those are figures stated by the company, not audited accounts, and Deliverance AI has named none of the customers.
The launch was timed to London Tech Week, where the UK government has spent the week promoting a sovereign compute agenda backed by billions in private investment.
What Deliverance AI sells is what it calls an agentic operating system: a governed layer that runs AI agents inside an organisation’s own environment, routes tasks between different models, logs what those agents do, and attributes the cost back to a budget line.
The 💜 of EU techThe latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!The target buyers are governments, regulated industries, and large enterprises, the organisations that hold the most sensitive data and answer to the most regulators.









