• Home
  • Latest
  • Fortune 500
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • Leadership
  • Lifestyle
  • Rankings
  • Multimedia

Trendingnow

1

Jeff Bezos wants the bottom half of earners to pay zero income tax—he says nurses making just $75K should save $12K a year

2

Jamie Dimon said the American Dream was slipping away. JPMorgan just put $40 million on the table to fix it

3

The river that supplies 40 million Americans is down to 23% — and about to make a $25 million bet on one fish

1

Jeff Bezos wants the bottom half of earners to pay zero income tax—he says nurses making just $75K should save $12K a year

2

Jamie Dimon said the American Dream was slipping away. JPMorgan just put $40 million on the table to fix it

3

The river that supplies 40 million Americans is down to 23% — and about to make a $25 million bet on one fish
AIPharmaceutical Industry

Exclusive: Perceptic, a startup automating drug discovery end-to-end for Big Pharma, emerges from stealth with $12 million in seed funding

Jeremy Kahn
By
Jeremy Kahn
Jeremy Kahn
Editor, AI
Down Arrow Button Icon
Jeremy Kahn
By
Jeremy Kahn
Jeremy Kahn
Editor, AI
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 26, 2026, 9:00 AM ET
Perceptic cofounders Tilman Flock (left), Zaki Trache (center), and Martin Copes.
Former Palantir executives Tilman Flock (left), Zaki Trache (center), and Martin Copes have cofounded Perceptic. The startup is building an AI platform to automate and speed drug discovery end-to-end for Big Pharma companies. Perceptic just secured a $12 million seed funding round led by venture capital firm Accel.Photo courtesy of Perceptic

A trio of former Palantir executives who helped spearhead that company’s Life Sciences practice have founded a startup called Perceptic that is building an end-to-end AI platform for drug development, handling everything from drug discovery to clinical trial design. The company emerged from stealth today and announced a $12 million seed funding round. 

London-based venture capital firm Accel led the funding round, alongside Air Street Capital and Elder Gull. The company’s valuation following the funding round was not disclosed.

Perceptic said its software is already being used by multiple top-tier pharmaceutical companies, though it was only allowed to name CSL, the Australian biotechnology company.

In the past two years, numerous startups have sprung up to use AI to speed drug discovery. This includes Isomorphic, a spin out from Google DeepMind, robotic lab pioneer Recursion, Insilico Medicine, and many others. But so far, no AI-discovered drugs have made it all the way through human clinical trials and been approved for sale, leading some to question whether AI is living up to the hype around revolutionizing drug development.

Tilman Flock, Perceptic’s cofounder and CEO, is a bioscience researcher who spent nearly seven years at Palantir, building the company’s commercial AI platform and helping life sciences companies use it. He tells Fortune that most AI startups targeting drug development have focused on improving just one particular part of the complex process, such as predicting protein structures, or looking for a molecule that will bind with a particular site on a target protein, or trying to optimize the recruitment of patients for clinical trials. Perceptic, by contrast, is pitching itself as the “connective tissue” between those discrete AI tools and the proprietary internal and external data that pharmaceutical companies use to make decisions.

Recommended Video

“For years, the industry has tried to improve each part of the [drug discovery] process separately, but that’s a linear process where insight dies at every handoff,” Flock said. 

Perceptic’s platform is “infrastructure and model agnostic,” Flock said, meaning customers can plug in their own data, hardware and AI models, while Perceptic acts as the layer that ties them together.

Perceptic is targeting three areas of pharma R&D. The first is scouting external assets that biotechnology companies have developed and that big pharma companies look to license. The startup says its system can compress the scientific due diligence needed to assess these drug candidates from weeks to hours.

The second area where Perceptic is focusing is helping pharma companies choose which indications to pursue in clinical trials, a decision that Flock said can swing the fate of investments worth millions of dollars.

The third is building a “data foundation” for clinical trial design which the company says has produced a 50-fold increase in clinical data extractions.

Sonali De Rycker, the Accel partner who led the firm’s investment, said she was won over by the idea that Perceptic’s software can “follow the drug” through the entire life cycle of development rather than being pitched towards a particular departmental silo within a big pharma company. “From the point at which you have hypothesis and evidence all the way to when you’re designing the clinical trial, and everything you do in between … it makes no sense for it to be siloed,” she told Fortune.

De Rycker said Accel had been tracking Flock and his co-founders, Martin Copes and Zaki Trache, while they were still at Palantir, where the trio were key engineers on AIP, and met them shortly after they decided to leave. The firm invested roughly a year after that first meeting, by which point Perceptic had moved beyond pilots into paid production deployments, she said. The team has grown to about 20 employees today, Flock said.

Pharmaceutical companies, Flock said, tend to draw on three buckets of data: public knowledge, such as patents and literature; internal proprietary data accumulated over years of research and clinical trials; and external datasets purchased from consultants and data vendors. Perceptic can harmonize all three types of data, he said. The system uses “AI workers,” or AI agents, that are tuned to different data types to hunt for insights or optimizations. 

Pharmaceutical customers need to know the provenance of any data used to make a decision, Flock said. As a result, they cannot tolerate AI hallucinations, where an AI model invents or conflates information. Perceptic’s AI system allows customers to trace every claim back to its source, he said.

De Rycker argued that Perceptic’s approach reflects a broader pattern in enterprise AI, in which platforms increasingly unify workflows and data across multiple departments rather than offering standalone tools. She added that these platforms can be “almost a new source of truth,” potentially replacing—or at least relegating to the background—traditional databases and enterprise resource planning software. 

She added that Perceptic has a “right to win” from Europe given the concentration of pharmaceutical talent in Switzerland and the U.K. Most of the company’s engineering is in London, drawing in part on Palantir alumni, Flock said; many of its customers are in the United States, where Perceptic plans to expand its presence.

Nathan Benaich, the founder and general partner of Air Street Capital, said in a statement that pharma’s next R&D leap “won’t come from a thousand better point tools, or from frontier models alone” but from an operating system “that connects data, decisions, and context across a 15-year process.”

Flock said the bulk of the seed money will go into engineering and growing Perceptic’s customer base. “We’re far beyond product-market fit,” he said. “It’s about scaling out.”

In 2001, Fortune first convened the smartest people we know, bringing together CEOs and founders, builders and investors, thinkers and doers. Since then, Fortune Brainstorm Tech has been the place where bold ideas collide. From June 8–10, we will return to Aspen—where it all began—to mark 25 years of Brainstorm. Register now.
About the Author
Jeremy Kahn
By Jeremy KahnEditor, AI
LinkedIn iconTwitter icon

Jeremy Kahn is the AI editor at Fortune, spearheading the publication's coverage of artificial intelligence. He also co-authors Eye on AI, Fortune’s flagship AI newsletter.

See full bioRight Arrow Button Icon

Latest in AI

Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025

Most Popular

Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Finance
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam
By Fortune Editors
October 20, 2025
Fortune Secondary Logo
Rankings
  • 100 Best Companies
  • Fortune 500
  • Global 500
  • Fortune 500 Europe
  • Most Powerful Women
  • World's Most Admired Companies
  • See All Rankings
  • Lists Calendar
Sections
  • Finance
  • Fortune Crypto
  • Features
  • Leadership
  • Health
  • Commentary
  • Success
  • Retail
  • Mpw
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • CEO Initiative
  • Asia
  • Politics
  • Conferences
  • Europe
  • Newsletters
  • Personal Finance
  • Environment
  • Magazine
  • Education
Customer Support
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Customer Service Portal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Use
  • Single Issues For Purchase
  • International Print
Commercial Services
  • Advertising
  • Fortune Brand Studio
  • Fortune Analytics
  • Fortune Conferences
  • Business Development
  • Group Subscriptions
About Us
  • About Us
  • Press Center
  • Work At Fortune
  • Terms And Conditions
  • Site Map
  • About Us
  • Press Center
  • Work At Fortune
  • Terms And Conditions
  • Site Map
  • Facebook icon
  • Twitter icon
  • LinkedIn icon
  • Instagram icon
  • Pinterest icon

Latest in AI

Marc Benioff, chief executive officer of Salesforce
SuccessJobs
As AI slashes white-collar jobs, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff says there’s one department still hiring: sales
By Emma BurleighMay 28, 2026
21 minutes ago
Costco CEO says AI is not stealing workers’ jobs—it’s ‘elevating’ them
Successthe future of work
Costco CEO says AI is not stealing workers’ jobs—it’s ‘elevating’ them
By Preston ForeMay 28, 2026
27 minutes ago
Boos, AI-washing, and ‘low-value human capital’: The psychological traps CEOs are falling into when they botch their AI messaging
C-Suitechief executive officer (CEO)
Boos, AI-washing, and ‘low-value human capital’: The psychological traps CEOs are falling into when they botch their AI messaging
By Claire ZillmanMay 28, 2026
35 minutes ago
g
CommentaryTraining
We gave our 5,000 employees a week to do nothing but learn AI. We learned the biggest blockers are human ones 
By Rob GiglioMay 28, 2026
4 hours ago
robot
CryptoRobots
This professor asked his robot clone about the future: ‘I think robots will coexist with people. Robots are the mirror of human beings’
By Yuri Kageyama and The Associated PressMay 28, 2026
5 hours ago
argus
InnovationRobotics
Duke scientists create robot from your nightmares: 20 legs, eyes everywhere, no front or back
By Allen Breed, Holly Ramer and The Associated PressMay 28, 2026
5 hours ago

Most Popular

Jeff Bezos wants the bottom half of earners to pay zero income tax—he says nurses making just $75K should save $12K a year
Success
Jeff Bezos wants the bottom half of earners to pay zero income tax—he says nurses making just $75K should save $12K a year
By Preston ForeMay 21, 2026
7 days ago
Jamie Dimon said the American Dream was slipping away. JPMorgan just put $40 million on the table to fix it
Banking
Jamie Dimon said the American Dream was slipping away. JPMorgan just put $40 million on the table to fix it
By Nick LichtenbergMay 27, 2026
1 day ago
The river that supplies 40 million Americans is down to 23% — and about to make a $25 million bet on one fish
Environment
The river that supplies 40 million Americans is down to 23% — and about to make a $25 million bet on one fish
By Dorany Pineda, Brittany Peterson and The Associated PressMay 27, 2026
1 day ago
Current price of oil as of May 27, 2026
Personal Finance
Current price of oil as of May 27, 2026
By Joseph HostetlerMay 27, 2026
1 day ago
Techlash grows in education: 'My daughter went to middle school and was sent home with a screen addiction in her backpack'
North America
Techlash grows in education: 'My daughter went to middle school and was sent home with a screen addiction in her backpack'
By Jocelyn Gecker and The Associated PressMay 26, 2026
2 days ago
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang admits he criticizes everything his 42,000-plus employees show him: ‘You can’t go a day without some criticism’
Success
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang admits he criticizes everything his 42,000-plus employees show him: ‘You can’t go a day without some criticism’
By Preston ForeMay 26, 2026
2 days ago

© 2026 Fortune Media IP Limited. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy | CA Notice at Collection and Privacy Notice | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information
FORTUNE is a trademark of Fortune Media IP Limited, registered in the U.S. and other countries. FORTUNE may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.