Built once, shared widely.
Each venture earns its own keep — and is priced so a small business can afford it as easily as an enterprise can.
Ragencia is a small, multicultural studio building AI products for the people who actually use them.

Ragencia was founded by Thierry Maman with a single, stubborn idea: that the AI revolution shouldn't only belong to billion-euro enterprises. France's small businesses, independent professionals, and everyday individuals deserve the same intelligence — at a price and a level of craft that actually fits their life.
So we built a lab. One that designs, ships, and operates AI-native products across music, voice, hospitality, longevity, web, memory, and home care. Not consulting, not services. Products — built once, refined forever, shared with everyone.
We are a multicultural team spread across several countries. We're in our twenties and in our fifties. We come from research labs, luxury hotels, recording studios, hospitals, restaurants, and gallery opening nights.
We don't have the same passport, accent, or wardrobe. What we share is an honest, almost embarrassing admiration for what technology can do — and a deep instinct for the human moments where it shouldn't get in the way.
Our mission is to deliver every benefit of AI — speed, scale, intelligence, availability — with the touch of humanity the technology alone can never produce.
That means warmth in the voice. Taste in the design. Care in the copy. A real person to call when something matters. AI without those things is just software. With them, it becomes something people actually want in their kitchen, their hotel, their atelier, their life.
Each venture earns its own keep — and is priced so a small business can afford it as easily as an enterprise can.
The AI handles scale and repetition. People decide what’s beautiful, what’s right, and what to ship.
We answer in 100 languages, but the studio that decides what gets made is rooted in Nice — by intent.
Whether you're an investor, an operator, or a small business with a real problem — we'd like to hear about it.