Pelgo targets the AI skills gap with fresh $5.5M round
Pelgo, a workforce development startup focused on emerging AI jobs, has raised $5.5 million in funding to build training programs for roles that many companies are only just beginning to define. The capital will be used to expand its curriculum, deepen partnerships with employers and scale its learning platform to thousands of workers globally.
Training for AI jobs that don’t fit old playbooks
As enterprises rush to adopt generative AI, automation and advanced data analytics, demand is soaring for hybrid roles such as AI operations specialists, prompt engineers, model governance analysts and human-in-the-loop reviewers. These positions sit between traditional IT, product and compliance functions, leaving most conventional training programs outdated.
Pelgo is positioning itself as a bridge between employers and workers by designing learning paths around real job descriptions and live projects rather than generic theory. Its platform combines short-form courses, scenario-based simulations and portfolio-building assignments that reflect how AI tools are actually deployed inside companies.
Employer-linked upskilling, not just online courses
Unlike broad online education marketplaces, Pelgo works directly with hiring teams to map the exact skills needed for new AI-driven roles. The startup then structures competency-based modules that can be completed in weeks, not years, enabling workers to rapidly transition from legacy positions into AI-augmented careers.
For employers, the company offers integrated assessment and tracking tools, allowing HR and team leads to monitor skill acquisition, benchmark internal talent and reduce reliance on costly external hiring. This approach aims to cut both the skills gap and the talent acquisition bottleneck that many organisations face as they scale AI initiatives.
Rising demand for AI-ready talent
Analysts expect millions of jobs to be reshaped by artificial intelligence over the next decade, with a growing share of roles requiring workers to collaborate with AI systems rather than replace them. By focusing on practical, job-aligned training for these emerging positions, Pelgo is betting that the most valuable education products will be those that sit closest to the hiring decision itself.
The new $5.5 million injection gives the startup fresh runway to refine its curriculum and broaden access for workers who risk being left behind as AI rewrites job descriptions across industries.

