Remote , a seven-year-old, Amsterdam-based payroll service provider, says it recently surpassed $300 million in annual recurring revenue and became cash-flow positive. But the real story, it insists, is what happened behind the scenes: a 50% increase in revenue per employee after the startup adopted AI at every level of the organization.
“As we are talking, on the second screen of my laptop, I have five different Claude instances running, building different things — and some of those are for me, but a lot of them are for Remote,” CEO Job van der Voort tells TechCrunch. This includes a Slack agent that summarizes discussions, as well as experiments with agentic AI; but the bigger picture is that Remote is now generating more revenue without increasing its headcount.
According to van der Voort, the recipe behind these efficiency gains is AI adoption well beyond the CEO’s office or engineering department. Employees across all functions have been launching apps in Remote Labs, an internal marketplace built on the company’s own technology, and which shares similarities with the AI capabilities that the company is now opening up for its clients.
Similarly to what Remote has been doing for its own processes, it is now helping clients create custom workflows. “We know that we’re ahead of most companies in that sense,” says van der Voort. “So we set up Remote Build, which is essentially what investors like to call ‘forward-deployed engineers’ — essentially people who work [directly] with our customers and prospects to do similar things inside of their organizations.”
Van der Voort claims these gains could compound further. He says Remote’s core payroll business has grown more than 300% year over year — growth he attributes largely to AI adoption, though the company has not provided independent verification of that figure. Remote also says it now serves tens of thousands of companies navigating global employment compliance, a number that, …