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Developers hate (bad) marketing, but they still need a way to find useful tools and services. That’s why you’ll find a preponderance of developers on forums and sites like Hacker News, Reddit, and Stack Overflow discussing their dev kits and why some tools are better than others.
That buying intent is the signal that Israeli startup Onfire wants to help software vendors capture. The company monitors public forums to learn what tools devs are discussing, and then uses AI to identify which companies those commenters work with and who the decision makers there are. The platform also layers in data on budget cycles, and puts it all together to help B2B sales teams time and contextualize their outreach.
Onfire is now coming out of stealth with $20 million in funding, TechCrunch has learned exclusively. This includes a fresh $14 million Series A co-led by Israeli VC firms Grove Ventures and TLV Partners. IN Venture, the venture arm of Japan’s Sumitomo Corporation, also participated, as did LeumiTech 77, a special fund marking Israel’s 77th anniversary.
Like many other Israeli founders and VCs, Onfire’s CEO Tal Peretz, CTO Shahar Shavit, and CPO Nitzan Hada are alumni of the Israel Defense Forces’ Unit 8200, an intelligence unit akin to the NSA that both won awards and sparked controversy for its alleged mass surveillance of civilians using advanced AI and data tools.
After joining the private tech sector, the trio (pictured above, from left to right: Hada, Peretz, and Shavit) saw the opportunity to use their intelligence expertise in SaaS. The startup estimates it has driven “more than $50 million in closed deals” for its clients since its beta launch 12 months ago, and says its early users include ActiveFence, Aiven, Cyera, Port, and Spectro Cloud, as well as other companies selling data, cybersecurity, FinOps, and observability solutions to technical buyers.
Still, one can’t ignore the elephant in the room: Given the founders’ intelligence background, Onfire’s trawling of public data to identify commenters’ employers is sure to raise eyebrows. But Grove Ventures managing partner Lotan Levkowitz frames the startup’s outcomes as a win-win. “Our customers are happy, and by the way, even their prospects are happy, because people pitch them with the right things at the right time,” he said.
The company hopes its vertical, data-centric focus will give it an edge over competitors. While other AI-enabled tools promise to boost enterprise sales, Peretz says one can’t do personalized outreach without something to base it off. “What set us apart is we started as a data-first company, and then we added the AI engine on top of that,” he said.
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Developers hate (bad) marketing, but they still need a way to find useful tools and services. That’s why you’ll find a preponderance of developers on forums and sites like Hacker News, Reddit, and Stack Overflow discussing their dev kits and why some tools are better than others.
That buying intent is the signal that Israeli startup Onfire wants to help software vendors capture. The company monitors public forums to learn what tools devs are discussing, and then uses AI to identify which companies those commenters work with and who the decision makers there are. The platform also layers in data on budget cycles, and puts it all together to help B2B sales teams time and contextualize their outreach.
Onfire is now coming out of stealth with $20 million in funding, TechCrunch has learned exclusively. This includes a fresh $14 million Series A co-led by Israeli VC firms Grove Ventures and TLV Partners. IN Venture, the venture arm of Japan’s Sumitomo Corporation, also participated, as did LeumiTech 77, a special fund marking Israel’s 77th anniversary.
Like many other Israeli founders and VCs, Onfire’s CEO Tal Peretz, CTO Shahar Shavit, and CPO Nitzan Hada are alumni of the Israel Defense Forces’ Unit 8200, an intelligence unit akin to the NSA that both won awards and sparked controversy for its alleged mass surveillance of civilians using advanced AI and data tools.
After joining the private tech sector, the trio (pictured above, from left to right: Hada, Peretz, and Shavit) saw the opportunity to use their intelligence expertise in SaaS. The startup estimates it has driven “more than $50 million in closed deals” for its clients since its beta launch 12 months ago, and says its early users include ActiveFence, Aiven, Cyera, Port, and Spectro Cloud, as well as other companies selling data, cybersecurity, FinOps, and observability solutions to technical buyers.
Still, one can’t ignore the elephant in the room: Given the founders’ intelligence background, Onfire’s trawling of public data to identify commenters’ employers is sure to raise eyebrows. But Grove Ventures managing partner Lotan Levkowitz frames the startup’s outcomes as a win-win. “Our customers are happy, and by the way, even their prospects are happy, because people pitch them with the right things at the right time,” he said.
The company hopes its vertical, data-centric focus will give it an edge over competitors. While other AI-enabled tools promise to boost enterprise sales, Peretz says one can’t do personalized outreach without something to base it off. “What set us apart is we started as a data-first company, and then we added the AI engine on top of that,” he said.
