Safebooks founders.

Former Check co-founder, after $360M Intuit exit, launches Safebooks with $15M in Seed funding

The Israeli startup, headed by Ahikam Kaufman, introduces Agentic Revenue Integrity, a real-time automation engine for quote-to-revenue operations.

Safebooks, an enterprise software startup aiming to automate the most error-prone parts of corporate finance, announced on Tuesday that it has raised $15 million in Seed funding led by 10D, Propel Ventures, and Mensch Capital with participation from Moneta Venture Capital, Magnolia Capital, Cerca Fund, Blue Moon, and other strategic investors. Safebooks has developed a platform it says can finally bring real-time integrity to revenue data, long one of the most manual and heavily scrutinized areas inside the office of the CFO.
Founded by Ahikam Kaufman, who previously co-founded Check, the payments company acquired by Intuit for $360 million, Safebooks is positioning itself as the “agentic” control layer that monitors and acts on revenue data as it moves across systems. Kaufman said the motivation stems from a simple but persistent problem: “Finance teams spend most of their time on data integrity, ensuring revenue data matches across systems. We built Safebooks to automate that work, using AI, as part of a deep data platform that understands how financial data connects across the CFO’s entire tech stack.”
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Safebooks founders
Safebooks founders
Safebooks founders.
(Safebooks)
Safebooks calls its flagship product Agentic Revenue Integrity (ARI), an automation framework layered on top of a company’s existing CRM, ERP, billing, and revenue-recognition tools.
The company says ARI can read documents in any format, verify that contract terms match what resides in financial systems, and tie every opportunity, invoice, contract, billing record, and payment into a unified map. The goal is to give CFOs a single source of truth while avoiding the costly and risky migrations that often accompany modernization of financial infrastructure.
According to the company, Safebooks has already monitored over $40 billion in financial transactions for enterprise SaaS customers while removing “thousands of hours” of manual reconciliation work.