Jane is practice management software loved by allied health practitioners, from physiotherapists and counsellors to chiropractors and massage therapists. We grew entirely through word of mouth. No sales team. Just a product people loved enough to tell their colleagues about.
Today, Jane supports over 65,000 clinics in 60 countries and we have over 1,000 new clinics joining Jane every month. We're profitable, north of $1.8B in valuation and remote-first. That combination, organic growth, real scale, real revenue, is rarer than it sounds.
We're now in the middle of our most significant chapter yet. AI is changing what software can do, and we're leaning in hard, both in how our team works and in what we build for our customers.
Jane touches almost every part of a practitioner's day. Scheduling, charting, billing, telehealth, payments, invoicing. Hundreds of thousands of staff members use Jane. Millions of patients book through our platform every month.
Practitioners got into healthcare to help people, not to spend their days on admin. As a SaaS leader in the healthcare space, we feel a deep responsibility to not settle. To keep pushing what's technically possible so that every part Jane gets meaningfully better as AI evolves. The practitioners and patients on Jane give us something most AI startups would trade a lot for: real workflows, real problems, and real feedback loops at scale.
That's why we formed JaneAI.
The infrastructure that enables what's possible for our customers. That foundation is being built now: an AI services layer powered by our own open-source agent framework and a knowledge layer that gives Agent Jane the context to understand how a healthcare practice actually runs.
Every capability built into this infrastructure becomes available across every surface of Jane. Every new piece of knowledge benefits every workflow that draws on it.
We're early, and there's a lot still to figure out. How memory deepens over time. How long-running workflows span days and weeks. How practitioners eventually bring their own expertise into the system. We know the direction. What we don't know is everything that becomes possible once the foundation matures. We're looking for engineers who will help us find that out.
This is more complex than a typical startup. You're not just building one product, you're building infrastructure that every team at Jane will depend on. If that sounds like a lot, it is. If it sounds exciting, keep reading.
We're a startup inside Jane. You get the autonomy and urgency of an early-stage company with the stability of an established one. That stability comes with accountability: we succeed when Jane succeeds, not just when Jane.ai ships.