Genspark Moves From Search to Deliverables

Diving deeper into

Genspark

Company Report
In April 2025, Genspark pivoted from search to agentic AI and launched Super Agent
Analyzed 4 sources

This pivot shows Genspark decided search alone was too narrow, and that the bigger prize was owning the finished work product. Instead of stopping at finding information, Super Agent turns a prompt into slides, spreadsheets, documents, calls, and web actions inside one workflow. That shifts Genspark closer to products like Manus and Gamma, where users pay for completed tasks, not just better answers.

  • The product change is concrete. Genspark is described as an agentic workspace for documents, slides, and spreadsheets, with more than 80 tools behind one chat box. That means the system is trying to replace the manual handoff between search, copy paste, slide design, spreadsheet cleanup, and follow up editing.
  • The closest comparison is Manus, which also packages browser control, research, integrations, and deliverable creation into one consumer agent. By May 2025, Genspark was already at $36M annualized revenue, up from $10M in mid April, which suggests the agentic product unlocked much faster monetization than a search style interface.
  • This also puts Genspark into direct competition with AI native productivity tools like Gamma. By September 2025, Genspark reached $51M annualized revenue and was valued at $1.25B, while Gamma reached $102M ARR by October 2025. The battle is less about who has the best model, and more about who owns the workflow where work gets finished.

The next phase is a race to become the default AI work surface for business output. The winners will be the products that can reliably orchestrate models, tools, and file formats into polished deliverables, then layer enterprise controls on top so teams can use them for daily work, not just demos.