Scribe Hits $100M ARR
Scribe
Hitting $100M ARR this quickly shows that Scribe is no longer just a handy screenshot tool, it is becoming a system that starts with individual employees making guides and then expands into enterprise software budgets for operations, security, and AI rollout. The key is that Scribe turns everyday clicks into a reusable map of how work actually gets done, which gives it a path to sell both simple documentation and higher priced workflow analysis into the same account.
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The growth engine is still bottom up. Scribe said it crossed more than 6 million users in May 2026, and its enterprise page says 45% of the Fortune 500 are on paid plans and 78,000 enterprises use the product. That means a broad free user base is feeding a much narrower but meaningful paid enterprise layer.
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The product is moving up the stack. Capture makes a step by step guide from a user doing a task on screen. Optimize then uses workflow data to build process maps, find bottlenecks, estimate ROI, and rank automation opportunities, which puts Scribe in budget conversations that usually belong to process mining vendors, consultants, and AI transformation programs.
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The funding and positioning fit that shift. Scribe raised $75M at a $1.3B valuation in November 2025 to launch Optimize, and by May 2026 described itself as a context layer for enterprise AI. That is a bigger ambition than documentation software, because the prize is becoming the source of workflow context that downstream copilots and agents rely on.
From here, the next leg of growth is selling Scribe as the map of enterprise work that makes AI deployments actually usable. If that lands, ARR can keep compounding not just from more seats, but from larger platform deals where documentation, governance, process analysis, and agent context are bought together.