NMBLR.ai launches innovation hub, announces global push
Enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) company NMBLR.ai said it has been profitable since 2024 and is growing by more than 50% annually as it expands its operations in the Philippines and overseas, according to a company news release.
The California-headquartered firm also opened its first regional innovation hub, called Programmable, in Makati City on Tuesday (June 23) as part of its effort to help organizations deploy AI systems beyond experimental pilot projects.
NMBLR said its AI platform is already being used in production by organizations in the United States and the Philippines, including U.S.-based grocery retailer Seafood City and global development firm Chemonics. In the Philippines, the company said it is working with banks, financial institutions, retailers and real estate developers, although it did not identify the companies.
Among its recent local projects, NMBLR cited the launch of Bahaideals.com, an AI-powered property platform that it said brings together major Philippine home developers to market properties to overseas buyers.
“AI is the most disruptive force of our generation, and most enterprises are still treating it as an experiment,” said Winston Damarillo, CEO and founder of NMBLR.ai.
We built NMBLR on a different conviction: that AI should run the business, deliver results leaders can measure, and do it on terms the enterprise controls. Doing that profitably isn’t a constraint; it’s the proof the model works.”
The company did not disclose financial figures supporting its claims of profitability or annual growth.
NMBLR argued that its reported performance contrasts with broader industry trends. Citing research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the company said 95% of generative AI pilots fail to deliver measurable profit-and-loss impact, even as global AI spending is projected by International Data Corporation (IDC) to reach $301 billion in 2026.

According to NMBLR, its platform is designed to work alongside existing enterprise software rather than replace it. Its product suite consists of Foundation, a governance layer for enterprise AI; Prism, which analyzes enterprise data using natural language; and Forge, which the company said can reduce AI deployment timelines from months to days.
The newly opened Programmable hub will also serve as the permanent venue for the company’s executive AI training program, known as Nexus, which NMBLR said has already been completed by hundreds of senior business leaders.
“Programmable is where AI stops being abstract,” Damarillo said. “Executives walk in with questions and walk out with running systems.”
Looking ahead, NMBLR said it plans to accelerate product development and expand further across Southeast Asia and North America using funding previously secured from strategic partners.
The company also announced a marketing partnership with Alchemi Ventures, which it said would extend NMBLR’s reach into more than 50 countries where Alchemi operates.
“The next decade of enterprise value creation won’t be won by replacing systems; it will be won by turning systems of record into systems of intelligence,” said Alchemi Ventures CEO Jamey Butcher.
“NMBLR is one of the few companies turning that idea into reality at scale. Together, we’re bringing this system of intelligence to organizations across the world’s fastest-growing markets.”
Founded in the United States, NMBLR.ai describes itself as an enterprise AI orchestration company headquartered in Manhattan Beach, California, with operations in Manila.

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