Axom has officially moved beyond the concept stage and is now focused on converting market interest into signed customers and live deployments.
The company, which recently rebranded from Ibex.ai, secured a $2.4m funding commitment from existing investor Capricorn Group to fuel its next phase of growth.
Axom CEO Danny Rippon told NEXT.io that the investment reflects confidence in the maturity of its technology, the scale of the market opportunity, and its commercial progress with operators.
Rippon pointed to three factors behind Capricorn’s decision: the scale of the problem facing operators, the maturity of Axom’s technology, and the commercial progress it has made to date.
“The investment reflects Capricorn’s belief that Axom is addressing a very large and urgent market need: helping businesses grow customer value while reducing waste, improving decision quality and supporting more responsible engagement,” Rippon said.
Many operators are still running customer engagement through broad segments, static campaigns, and bonus-heavy CRM mechanics, which Axom is specifically designed to replace.
“Axom moves that decisioning to true one-to-one player-level profitability,” Rippon explained, outlining the platform’s core advantage over traditional engagement models.
The fresh funding will support product development, team expansion, and commercial growth as Axom pushes toward a more autonomous offering for operators.
Rippon said the investment is designed to accelerate platform deployment at a time when operators face increasing pressure to improve profitability and reduce inefficient bonus spend.
“We are continuing to deepen Axom’s predictive intelligence capabilities, especially around real-time, next-best-action decisioning, explainability and performance measurement,” Rippon said, detailing the product roadmap ahead.
The company is also focused on simplifying integration into existing CRM and marketing technology stacks to make adoption as straightforward as possible for operators.
“The goal is to make Axom easier to deploy, simple to prove, and straightforward for operators to scale,” Rippon added, emphasising usability as a key commercial priority.
On the question of measuring success, Rippon was clear that commercial traction remains the primary milestone for the business in the near term.
“The primary [milestone] is commercial traction; converting the current level of market interest into signed customers, live deployments, and recurring revenue,” he said.
Beyond signing new clients, Axom also wants to demonstrate measurable performance improvements that operators can quantify in hard numbers across profitability and responsible engagement metrics.
Rippon confirmed that while additional external investment remains a possibility down the line, any future fundraising would be driven by opportunity rather than necessity.
“The priority now is execution,” he concluded, adding that this would be achieved through product enhancement, customer support, and demonstrating the full scale of the commercial opportunity.

