Tucked away in the enterprise software universe is a company that quietly fuses artificial intelligence with back‑office work rather than sci‑fi demos. Its software robots live in spreadsheets and ERP systems, not on conference stages: they read invoices, push orders through legacy banking platforms and click around old insurance interfaces the way a human clerk would, only faster and without breaks. Over the past few years it has turned that very unglamorous niche into a full automation platform that can take over dozens or even hundreds of workflows at a large corporate client, and the economics have followed suit – gross margins north of 80%, operating discipline improving and free cash flow turning a former cash burner into a business that can now fund its own growth.

The balance sheet looks more like that of a cautious industrial than a flashy AI stock. With roughly 1.7 billion dollars in cash and securities, negligible debt and its first fully GAAP‑profitable fiscal year behind it…