EyeRate prompts customers for feedback, then invites satisfied ones to post a public review mentioning the specific employee – tying review generation directly to individual performance incentives.
ENTRY ANGLES
Platforms connecting employees to shared outcomes through personal incentives · AI-powered contribution measurement for roles with non-obvious metrics · Intermediate reward cadencing systems to maintain motivation across long cycles
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI/ML for measuring contribution and non-standard work, Behavioral psychology/motivation design, Incentive platform architecture and real-time reward distribution
Positive online reviews are an indirect product of good service – but most companies rely on customers to volunteer them, which they rarely do. EyeRate closes that gap by turning frontline employees into an active part of the review generation process, and paying them when it works.
The mechanics are straightforward. After each customer interaction, the employee prompts the customer for feedback through the platform. If the feedback is positive, the platform immediately invites the customer to post a public review mentioning both the company and the specific employee. If the feedback is negative, it routes internally so that someone can follow up before the customer posts anything online.
The key shift is in how the ask is framed. Employees request reviews of their own performance – not of the company abstractly. That personal framing dramatically increases the response rate. The result: EyeRate clients report a 1,000% increase in positive online reviews after implementation. For a local business like a beauty salon, that kind of visibility can drive 20–30% revenue growth in a matter of months.
A monitoring bot tracks review sites in real time, collecting mentions and analyzing sentiment. A dashboard makes the data visible to management. When a positive review lands and names an employee, an automatic reward triggers immediately – cash transferred to a digital wallet the employee can connect to Google Pay or Apple Pay. The speed of that feedback loop is deliberate: instant reinforcement builds the behavioral habit much faster than monthly bonuses.
Employees can also track a live leaderboard of top-mentioned colleagues, adding a competitive dimension. Each employee's profile stores every review they've received – both positive and negative – giving them ongoing feedback on what to keep doing and what to improve. That record becomes a portable professional asset: a more honest and specific signal of service quality than any CV, and one that gives employees additional incentive to chase positive reviews. What's good for the employee's reputation is good for the company.
EyeRate currently serves more than 2,500 companies covering about 60,000 employees. The latest $4 million round brings total funding to $5.9 million.
The mechanics here closely resemble those of Grata, [covered previously](/review/detal-kotoraja-izmenila-vsjo), which raised $6.3 million with a similar model. The parallel validates the approach.
The broader trend is the expansion of performance-tied incentives beyond executives and quota-carrying salespeople. Measuring every employee's contribution to outcomes has historically been too difficult. But now that data trails exist for most customer interactions, and AI can analyze patterns across large volumes of behavior, the range of roles that can be meaningfully measured – and rewarded – is widening.
Several startups are building different pieces of this infrastructure:
- EyeRate and Grata measure frontline contribution through customer reviews.
- EveryoneSocial turns employees into micro-influencers who distribute company content across social networks. It has raised $20.6 million.
- Bonusly enables peer-to-peer micro-rewards that reflect the quality of collaboration across teams. It raised $31.4 million.
- Arya connects reward triggers to events logged in CRM and other enterprise platforms, enabling fully automated recognition. It raised $3.3 million.
The most analytically interesting player in this space is SetSail ([related review](/review/prjaniki-dlja-massovyh-prodazh)), which raised $37 million. B2B sales cycles are long, and traditional commissions only pay out at close. SetSail's AI analyzes successful deals to map the sequence of intermediate actions that tend to lead there, then evaluates each in-progress action against that pattern and rewards promising behavior in real time – without waiting for a closed deal. The practical effect is sustained motivation throughout the sales cycle rather than a single payout at the end.
This is a significant precedent. Many roles contribute to outcomes in ways that resist simple measurement. Once actions can be logged and AI can identify which combinations actually move the needle, virtually any employee's contribution becomes measurable. And a measurement system that improves continuously with more data – through machine learning built into the platform – becomes a genuinely durable advantage.
The general direction is building platforms that connect more employees to shared outcomes through personal incentives.
The design requirements are consistent across all successful implementations. Rewards need to be objective enough to feel fair, fast enough to feel connected to the action, and immediate enough to actually shape behavior – the gap between doing something and being recognized for it needs to be as short as possible. Most people can't sustain motivation for deferred rewards.
AI opens up the harder part of this problem: measuring contribution for roles where simple metrics don't capture the real work. And it enables the kind of SetSail-style intermediate reward cadencing that keeps motivation high across long execution cycles.
The economic environment makes all of this more urgent. When companies are under pressure to achieve more with the same or fewer people, the ability to direct effort and recognize the right behaviors becomes a genuine competitive lever – not an HR nice-to-have.