Mozark Lands $40M to Bridge Global Digital Divide with AI Testers
- $40M Funding: Mozark secures $40 million in Series B funding to bridge the global digital divide.
- 20+ Countries: Mozark deploys AI testers across more than 20 countries to ensure digital experience equity.
- 50+ Clients: The company already serves over 50 clients, including telecom operators, financial institutions, and government regulators.
Experts agree that Mozark's AI-driven testing platform is a critical step toward ensuring digital experience equity, addressing the growing digital quality divide that disproportionately affects emerging markets.
Mozark Lands $40M to Bridge Global Digital Divide with AI Testers
NEW YORK, NY – March 11, 2026 – Mozark, a Singapore-headquartered digital testing company, has secured a $40 million Series B funding round to tackle a growing global problem: the digital quality divide. The investment, led by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) of the World Bank Group and global investment firm RMB Capitalworks, signals a significant bet on the critical need for reliable digital performance in an AI-driven world.
With continued participation from early-stage backer Kalaari Capital, the fresh capital will fuel Mozark's expansion into the United States and the Global South. The company's mission is to deliver “Digital Experience Equity,” ensuring that essential online services—from mobile banking to government portals—function effectively for every user, regardless of their location, device, or network quality.
In a world where digital access is fundamental to economic participation, performance gaps are more than a minor inconvenience; they create barriers to inclusion. Mozark’s platform is designed to find and fix these gaps before they impact users, a capability that has attracted investors focused on both technological innovation and global development.
Beyond Speed: The Quest for Digital Experience Equity
The promise of a globally connected digital world often breaks down in reality. While AI is accelerating the deployment of sophisticated digital services, their real-world performance remains wildly inconsistent. This disparity, known as the 'digital quality divide,' disproportionately affects emerging markets, where unreliable digital experiences can cripple access to finance, healthcare, and education.
A slow or failed mobile payment is not just a technical glitch; it can mean a small business owner loses a sale or a family cannot pay for essential goods. When government service portals are inaccessible on lower-end devices or slower networks, citizens are cut off from vital support. This is the gap Mozark aims to close. Its focus on “Digital Experience Equity” is a direct challenge to the notion that a subpar digital life is acceptable for those outside major metropolitan hubs.
The involvement of the IFC, the World Bank Group’s private sector arm, underscores the development implications of this mission. Reliable digital infrastructure is a cornerstone of modern economic growth, and ensuring its quality is paramount for fostering inclusion.
"Reliable digital infrastructure is critical to productivity, inclusion, and growth in emerging markets," said Farid Fezoua, Director for Equity, Funds and Venture Capital at IFC. "By strengthening the performance and reliability of the applications and networks that underpin essential services, our investment in Mozark will support innovation, skilled job creation, and broader access to digital services, helping emerging markets not only consume, but increasingly build and scale, digital solutions."
A New Breed of AI Testers Hits the Ground
Mozark's technical approach differs significantly from traditional performance monitoring. While many competitors, such as Dynatrace or Datadog, offer powerful observability from data centers, Mozark takes testing to the streets. The company deploys what it calls “agentic tester deployments” on thousands of real, physical devices—smartphones and tablets—across more than 20 countries.
These AI-assisted agents execute scripted critical user journeys, mimicking how a real person would interact with an app or website. This generates “synthetic experience telemetry” that provides a ground-truth measurement of performance across the full AI-native stack, from the application itself down to the underlying data centers, network providers, and even power infrastructure. This allows organizations to pinpoint the root cause of a poor experience, whether it’s a bug in the app, a bottleneck in a specific mobile network, or an issue with a local data center.
This methodology is a direct response to a growing bottleneck in the tech world. As one of the company's founders highlighted, AI has changed how software is written, but testing has remained a challenge.
"While AI has revolutionized coding, testing remains constrained by physical infrastructure limitations, creating a critical bottleneck in the DevOps lifecycle," said Chandra Ramamoorthy, Mozark's Founder and CPO. "Mozark addresses this gap by enabling agentic tester deployments at scale, allowing organizations to validate real-world performance reliably."
With the new funding, the company plans to accelerate the commercialization of its agent-to-agent communication testing platform, a technology it believes will be foundational for the next generation of complex, interactive digital services.
Why Global Investors Are Betting on Quality Assurance
The $40 million investment is not just a vote of confidence in Mozark's technology but also a validation of the massive market opportunity in digital quality assurance. For investors like RMB Capitalworks, the appeal lies in a scalable solution to a critical enterprise problem.
"We are very excited to join this journey of Mozark whose Agentic AI lead platform solves critical problems of Enterprises and Regulators in the App Testing and Observability domain globally," stated Robert Oudhof, Director of RMB Capitalworks. He emphasized that the funding would enable Mozark to expand its enterprise client base, forge global partnerships, and continue investing in cutting-edge R&D.
Mozark already serves over 50 clients, including telecom operators, financial institutions, and government regulators, who use its data for benchmarking, service assurance, and compliance. For a regulator, this real-world data can verify if a telecom provider is meeting its service level agreements. For a bank, it can ensure its mobile app works flawlessly for customers in rural areas.
The continued backing from early investor Kalaari Capital reinforces this conviction. "The team has consistently anticipated where digital systems are headed, and we believe Mozark is well positioned for its next phase of global growth," said Rajesh Raju, Managing Director at Kalaari Capital.
Charting a Course for Global Expansion
With its new war chest, Mozark is set to accelerate its expansion into two priority markets: the highly competitive U.S. market and the diverse, high-growth markets of the Global South. The challenges in each are distinct. In the U.S., Mozark will compete with established observability giants and must clearly articulate its unique value proposition to sophisticated enterprise customers.
In the Global South—encompassing regions across Africa, Latin America, and developing Asia—the company faces a patchwork of regulatory environments and highly variable infrastructure. However, it is here that its mission of ensuring digital equity resonates most strongly and where its real-world testing capabilities offer a distinct advantage over competitors. By providing a clear picture of on-the-ground performance, Mozark can empower local and international companies to build services that are truly universal.
As Founders and Co-CEOs Kartik Raja and Fabien Renaudineau explained, "AI is accelerating digital services everywhere, but experience quality remains disparate and unreliable and that directly impacts the broader digital divide. Mozark enables organizations to measure and improve service performance in real-world conditions, detect gaps early, and ensure reliable digital experiences at scale."
