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Microsoft UK veteran joins Tramlines Ventures as MD

Microsoft UK veteran joins Tramlines Ventures as MD

Thu, 11th Jun 2026 (Today)

Glen Robinson has left Microsoft UK to join Tramlines Ventures as Managing Director of its AI Platform, adding the former National Technology Officer at Microsoft UK to the leadership team of the London-based AI venture firm.

At Tramlines, Robinson will work alongside Chair Craig Donaldson, the former founding Chief Executive Officer of Metro Bank, and Andrew Winters, Managing Director of the Tramlines Accelerator and a former Managing Partner in Deloitte's technology and digital advisory practice. The firm is building an early-stage investment and venture platform focused on AI-native services businesses led by sector specialists.

Robinson brings a background in cloud and AI systems and has advised the UK Government on technology strategy and regulation. His appointment is one of several senior hires as Tramlines expands its management team after securing fresh funding for both its management company and its first fund.

Tramlines has completed the first close of Fund I, which is targeting a final close of £10 million. It has also raised more than £2 million in Seed funding for the management company at a pre-money valuation of £22.5 million, following an earlier £1 million raise at an £8 million valuation.

The funding supports a model that combines investment, advisory work and an accelerator programme under one structure. Over the next three years, Tramlines plans to back 30 AI-native services companies with initial pre-Seed investments of £250,000.

Leadership build

Donaldson is one of the most prominent names attached to the company. He led Metro Bank from launch to a £1.6 billion initial public offering and more than £20 billion in assets, according to Tramlines.

Winters brings experience in consulting and large-scale technology operations. Before joining Tramlines, he was Chief Operating Officer of NEOM's technology and digital subsidiary and spent years advising multinational groups on technology strategy, transformation and risk.

The broader team includes Daniel Lanyon, who leads Fund I and was previously Editor-in-Chief and a founding partner of AltFi. Erica Young has joined as Director of Networks after roles at Anthemis, Atomico and the Newton Venture Program. Ashleigh Gardner is Chief of Staff and Director of Operations, and Andrea Madaschi is Chief Financial Officer.

Tramlines has also brought in a group of senior executives, founders and private market investors as "Invested Advisors" to support portfolio companies. Those backers have invested in both the business and the fund.

Venture model

The firm is pitching itself as a different kind of venture operation in the AI market. Rather than acting only as a fund, it combines capital with an accelerator and an internal AI platform aimed at turning specialist industry knowledge into software-driven businesses.

Its approach centres on backing founders with deep experience in specific sectors and helping them build companies that embed AI into existing workflows. Tramlines is focused on services businesses rather than standalone software products, with an emphasis on early commercial validation, capital efficiency and a path to profitability.

At the centre of that model is what Tramlines calls its AI Transformation Platform, which it says turns operational knowledge into scalable systems using agent-based architectures and orchestration layers. Its 24-month accelerator is designed to move startups from concept to commercial operation within a structured framework.

The strategy reflects a wider shift in the UK startup market, where investors are increasingly looking for practical AI applications in specific industries rather than broad consumer propositions. Firms with sector expertise in areas such as financial services, industrial operations and professional services have drawn growing interest as businesses look for ways to apply AI to routine processes and decision-making.

For Tramlines, Robinson's appointment brings in a senior executive with experience at one of the world's largest technology groups as it seeks to build credibility with founders, investors and corporate customers. His move from Microsoft UK also signals the appeal that some smaller AI-focused ventures now hold for executives with big-company backgrounds.

Albert Azis-Clauson, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Tramlines, highlighted the significance of the hires in a statement. "The quality of the people joining Tramlines is the strongest signal of what we are building. These are individuals who have built banks, advised governments, led global consulting practices, and scaled technology platforms. They are not here to deploy capital passively. They are here to build," he said.

Donaldson also commented on the firm's structure and operating model. "This is one of the most structured approaches to company building I have seen. The combination of governance, operational discipline, and technical capability is what gives this model credibility at scale," he said.