San Francisco startup Jeeva AI has secured $9 million in funding, led by JLL Spark, to push its vision of an agentic sales platform that augments, rather than replaces, sales representatives. The company claims its system can save users up to three hours daily by automating tasks from lead discovery to CRM updates.
This funding round, which also included participation from Sapphire Ventures and Alt Capital, signals continued investor appetite for AI tools aimed at boosting white-collar productivity. Jeeva is positioning itself directly against the wave of "AI BDR" solutions that have often proven cumbersome, requiring extensive manual oversight and generating low-quality interactions.
Jeeva’s core pitch is empowerment. Founder and CEO Gaurav Bhattacharya emphasizes keeping humans central to the sales process, using AI workflows—including proprietary, fine-tuned models with built-in memory—to handle the administrative drag. Features span personalized outreach, meeting note capture, and data hygiene within CRMs.
What sets Jeeva apart, according to investor Ajey Kaushal of JLL Spark, is its focus on removing "administrative busywork" while maintaining human oversight, leading to reported productivity gains of up to 10x for some teams.
Crucially, Jeeva is finding significant traction outside the typical tech bubble. The platform has rapidly scaled to 35,000 users since launching in January 2025, focusing heavily on traditionally underserved sectors like real estate, healthcare, and financial services. These industries often lack the sophisticated sales tech stack common in SaaS, making the platform’s quick 10-minute deployment particularly appealing. Sapphire Ventures noted this focus on the "non-tech economy" as a key differentiator.
Beyond the Hype Cycle
The success of an agentic sales platform like Jeeva hinges on delivering tangible efficiency without creating new management headaches. While many AI sales tools have struggled with spammy output and data inaccuracy, Jeeva’s promise of fine-tuned models and rapid integration suggests a pragmatic approach to enterprise adoption, aiming to make existing reps significantly more effective rather than attempting a full automation takeover.



