What Aleph does

Aleph is an AI-native FP&A platform rebuilding the finance team's stack around a tight integration between cloud spreadsheets, a web app, and LLM-powered automation. Aleph connects to a customer's general ledger (NetSuite, QuickBooks, Sage Intacct, Xero), CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot), HRIS (Rippling, Gusto, Workday), and data warehouse, then surfaces clean, reconciled financial and operational data inside spreadsheets that finance teams already know how to use. AI agents inside the product automate variance commentary, budget vs. actual drill-downs, revenue forecasting, headcount planning, and monthly board-deck assembly.

The product replaces a tangle of Anaplan, Adaptive, Pigment, Mosaic, and homegrown Excel models with a single source of truth that updates in real time. Customers like Zapier, Turo, Harvey, Chess.com, and hundreds of others report eliminating 90% of manual close, reporting, and forecasting work, with an 80% sales win rate fueling category-leading growth.

Who it's for

Aleph targets VP Finance, CFOs, and FP&A managers at high-growth scale-ups and mid-market companies that have outgrown spreadsheets-plus-NetSuite but find legacy CPM tools rigid and expensive. The sweet spot is companies in the $10M-$500M revenue range running modern SaaS stacks.

Pricing

Aleph is sold via custom enterprise pricing tied to data sources, seats, and modules. There is no public list price and no self-serve free tier.

Team & funding

Aleph was founded in 2020 by Albert Gozzi (CEO) and Santiago Perez De Rosso (CTO), with Gozzi building the MVP himself in his NYC apartment during the pandemic. The company went through Y Combinator and has raised $46M total: a seed in 2021, a $16.7M Series A in 2023 led by Bain Capital Ventures, and a $29M Series B announced September 17, 2025 led by Khosla Ventures with continued participation from Picus Capital, Bain Capital Ventures, and Y Combinator. Aleph has grown 10X since its Series A and is headquartered at 169 Madison Avenue, New York.

Position vs competitors

Aleph competes with Pigment, Mosaic, Cube, Anaplan, Adaptive Insights (Workday), and traditional Excel-plus-NetSuite stacks. Its differentiation is the AI-native architecture, native spreadsheet UX, and a tight Khosla-backed bet on an LLM-first product rebuild of the FP&A category.