Cursor snaps up enterprise startup Koala in challenge to GitHub Copilot

Cursor logo | Image Credits:Cursor

The startup behind the viral AI coding app Cursor is snapping up top talent from AI enterprise startups in a bid to bolster its competition with Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot and win over businesses looking to supercharge their employees with AI coding tools.

In one recent case, Cursor maker Anysphere struck a deal to acquire the AI-powered customer relationship management (CRM) startup Koala, two sources familiar with the matter told TechCrunch.

As part of the deal, Cursor will bring on several of Koala’s top engineers to build out a dedicated enterprise-readiness team. However, the entire Koala team will not be joining Anysphere, and Cursor does not plan to integrate the startup’s core CRM product, a source told TechCrunch.

Koala plans to shut down in September, the company said in a blog post published on Friday. The announcement comes just five months after Koala raised a $15 million Series A led by CRV, with participation from HubSpot Ventures, Recall Capital and Afore. Koala was nearly four years old, had roughly 30 employees according to LinkedIn, and had worked with clients such as Vercel, Statsig, and Retool.

Sources in this story requested anonymity to speak with TechCrunch about private matters. Koala and its founders did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment. Cursor declined to comment.

The Koala deal paints a picture of the two types of AI startups we’re seeing in 2025. There’s Cursor, a juggernaut of an AI tool that is growing so fast it’s starting to encroach on the AI space’s largest players, including Microsoft and Anthropic. At the same time, there’s a growing number of startups like Koala: B2B AI startups that seemed promising — with a co-founder from Meta and advisors like Jack Altman — but have quickly run out of steam.

Cursor is capitalizing on this disparity, leveraging middling AI startups as a means to build out its own enterprise offerings. Anysphere also recently hired the CEO of cybersecurity startup Resourcely, Travis McPeak, to lead the company’s security teams, according to The Information.

These deals look a lot like Big Tech’s reverse-acquihires, such as Meta’s recent deal to hire Scale AI’s leaders. Much like in Meta and Scale’s deal, Cursor can now move quickly to build out new business segments while leaving questionable businesses behind.

Cursor hopes that Koala and Resourcely’s talent will help it evolve from a personal developer tool that engineers quietly use at work and become an enterprise‑wide platform that companies pay large contracts to access. Most enterprises today that offer employees an AI tool choose Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot, which works as an AI-powered extension to existing integrated development environments (IDEs) such as VS Code or JetBrains.

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