Alludium has launched its AI Agent platform for public use, expanding access beyond early design partners and offering paid plans from day one.
The product is described as an "Agent Operating System" for building and managing custom AI agents through conversation, without writing code. It is positioned for individuals and teams that want to deploy agents that can take actions across workplace tools and workflows.
Alludium first showcased the platform at Web Summit 2025. It has since worked with an initial group of design partners and has now opened access to individuals and teams looking to build and deploy their own agents.
Sure Valley Ventures and Catenai have backed Alludium. Catenai is an AIM-quoted provider of digital media and technology services.
Product focus
AI agents have become a fast-moving area of interest for businesses seeking more day-to-day automation. Many products in the category aim to handle routine tasks, connect to business software, and follow multi-step processes with limited user input. Vendors increasingly market agent tools as a layer that sits above existing applications rather than a replacement.
Alludium's approach centres on a no-code, conversational interface for creating and deploying agents. It also says teams can collaborate around agents, suggesting shared governance and reuse of agent configurations within an organisation.
The platform is also positioned for agents that "take action across real tools". In practice, that often depends on connectors and integrations with third-party services. Alludium announced a partnership with Google earlier this year, but the launch statement does not specify which features the partnership covers or which Google products are involved.
Commercial launch
Billing is now live as part of the public release. Paid plans are available immediately, with payments processed through Stripe.
The move to paid access marks a shift from a design-partner phase to broader market testing, where pricing, onboarding, and support become key factors. For early-stage platform products, it can also signal the start of more formal customer relationships and product commitments.
The announcement does not disclose pricing, customer numbers, or revenue. It also does not say where sales efforts will focus or which sectors are expected to adopt the platform first.
Investor briefing
Catenai and Alludium plan to host a live investor presentation and product demonstration via the Investor Meet Company platform. Further details, including the date and registration information, are expected to follow.
John Frizelle, Founder & CEO of Alludium, said the move to public access follows months of work with early users.
"Opening Alludium to the public is a milestone we've been working tirelessly toward since day one. We've spent months refining the platform with our design partners, and we're now ready to put it in the hands of a wider audience. This is the beginning of a new chapter for Alludium," said John Frizelle, Founder & CEO, Alludium.
For Catenai, the launch provides a clearer reference point for the progress of a portfolio company that has been building toward a commercial release.
"Alludium's launch represents the delivery of a commitment we've been building toward since our initial investment. We're proud to see the team reach this milestone and look forward to supporting their continued growth," said John Farthing, CEO, Catenai.
Catenai plans to share more information shortly on the investor presentation and product demonstration.