Unframe, a startup that helps organizations implement artificial intelligence, has secured a cumulative $100 million in contracts within just one year and is now completing another funding round.
The company is raising $50 million in a Series B round led by Highland Europe, with participation from existing investors Bessemer Venture Partners, Craft Ventures, TLV Partners, Third Point Ventures, Cerca Partners, and Vintage Investment Partners. The new financing brings the total amount raised by the company since its founding in 2024 to $100 million.
“We’ve barely touched the money from the previous round completed a year ago. Our burn rate is very low,” Shay Levi, co-founder and CEO of Unframe, told Calcalist. The company announced its previous $30 million funding round in April 2025. Earlier this year, Unframe ranked second on Calcalist’s list of the 50 Most Promising Startups.
Unframe was founded in 2024 by CEO Shay Levi, COO Larissa Schneider, and VP R&D Adi Azarya, all former executives at cybersecurity company Noname Security, which was acquired by Akamai for approximately $500 million. Levi was co-founder and CTO of Noname, Schneider led global marketing operations, and Azarya managed parts of the company’s R&D activity.
Unframe currently employs around 130 people, about 70 of them in Israel, with the rest based in California and Berlin. The new capital will be used to expand sales teams, deepen technological investment, and strengthen the management team as the company prepares for its next phase of growth.
The company develops an AI platform designed to help organizations turn business needs into operational AI solutions in days rather than months. While enterprise AI investment has surged, many projects remain stuck in pilot phases and fail to reach broad operational deployment.
The market is crowded with tools promising an AI revolution, but many provide only management layers or partial automation. Unframe operates under a different model, allowing organizations to experiment with AI solutions before paying, only moving to commercial deployment once customers see measurable value.
The platform is built around modular technological building blocks, described internally as “Lego pieces”, that connect to customers’ existing systems and infrastructure. Solutions can operate in the customer’s cloud environment, on-premises, or through a managed SaaS model.
According to the company, revenue from existing customers has grown by 400%, while Unframe now works with global organizations across multiple sectors, including Fortune 500 companies.
Levy said the $100 million in signed contracts carry average terms of three to five years.
“The fact that we crossed $100 million in contracts within a year shows companies are ready to adopt AI rapidly when solutions can be implemented in a simple and practical way,” he said. “Almost every organization we speak with already understands where AI can create real value, but very few projects actually make it into production.”