Full-Time
Posted on 2/10/2026
Cloud-based directory and identity management platform
No salary listed
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Hybrid
Hybrid role based in Bengaluru; 3 days on-site per week, 2 days remote.
JumpCloud provides cloud-based directory services that centralize the management of user identities and access to apps, networks, and devices across both on-premises and cloud environments. It works by offering a centralized directory with features like single sign-on, user provisioning, device management, and network access control, delivered as scalable subscription tiers. Unlike traditional IAM tools, JumpCloud combines directory services, SSO, device management, and access controls in a single cloud platform that supports mixed infrastructures. Its goal is to help organizations securely manage who can access what across systems in a scalable, easy-to-use way.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
Series F
Total Funding
$391.7M
Headquarters
Louisville, Colorado
Founded
2012
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Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Life Insurance
Disability Insurance
Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account
Unlimited Paid Time Off
401(k) Company Match
Remote Work Options
JumpCloud has appointed Shianne Sampson as Chief Revenue Officer to lead global revenue growth and expand its intelligent, secure IT platform. The appointment follows the recent addition of Roland Palmer as Chief Information Security Officer, strengthening the company's leadership as it expands in enterprise and global markets. Sampson brings over 20 years of experience scaling revenue organisations through rapid transformation. She most recently served as CRO at Eventbrite, with previous leadership roles at New Relic, Zenefits and Yelp, where she founded Yelp University. She is also the published author of Triage: Sales Coaching. JumpCloud provides an AI-powered unified IT management platform that consolidates identity, device and access management for organisations globally.
The dual disconnect: addressing AI maturity gaps in enterprises. JumpCloud's latest report sheds light on the disparity between perceived and actual AI readiness among enterprises. JumpCloud has unveiled its Q1 2026 IT Trends Report, titled "The Dual Disconnect: Why Your AI Maturity Now Fails to Scale." The research highlights a significant gap in enterprise AI readiness. While 40% of organisations consider themselves AI mature, only 22% meet the objective IT standards necessary to scale effectively. The adoption of AI is nearly universal, with 99.6% of organisations engaging in some form of AI. However, the report notes that fragmented IT infrastructures leave 60% of professionals unable to address rapidly evolving security threats. The study identifies a notable difference between perceived AI maturity and actual operational readiness. Key insights include: * Maturity Illusion: Although many IT leaders view their AI practices as advanced, only 22% meet rigorous standards for AI readiness. * Balancing Productivity and Risk: While 90% of leaders report productivity benefits from AI, 74% express concerns about security risks, particularly unauthorised data access and AI-generated phishing. * Emergence of Shadow AI: 61% of organisations report using unsanctioned AI tools, creating gaps in visibility and governance. * Need for Unified Systems: 85% of IT leaders stress the importance of secure identity and access management (IAM) in scaling AI safely. The report emphasises that secure AI deployment relies on consolidation rather than speed. It notes that organisations with fragmented IT infrastructures face challenges in monitoring and managing both human and AI users. Coordinating identity and access controls across the organisation can reduce risk and help ensure AI initiatives scale more safely and consistently. The study suggests that bridging the gap between perceived and actual AI readiness is essential for protecting enterprise operations and securing emerging AI workflows. Consolidating IAM practices and IT systems provides a foundation for organisations to manage AI responsibly while supporting growth and productivity.
JumpCloud has launched JumpCloud Ventures, a new venture arm backing early-stage companies in identity, security, AI and IT productivity. The programme will provide capital alongside access to JumpCloud's operating experience and network, whilst maintaining founder autonomy over product direction. The venture arm announced its first investment in Tofu, a startup preventing identity fraud in hiring and onboarding. JumpCloud highlighted that identity risks often emerge before users log in, particularly as remote work expands. Tofu is building an identity and security platform for recruiting aimed at establishing trust in AI-enabled and remote work environments. CEO Rajat Bhargava framed the initiative as an opportunity to support emerging companies tackling challenging problems in identity and security, whilst Tofu co-founder Jason Zoltak described the backing as validation of an underexplored security gap.
JumpCloud has launched JumpCloud Ventures, a venture investment programme supporting early-stage startups in identity, security, artificial intelligence and IT productivity. The company announced its first investment in Tofu, a startup preventing identity fraud during hiring and onboarding. CEO Rajat Bhargava said the venture arm reflects JumpCloud's maturity and aims to support founders through operational expertise rather than just financial backing. The programme will take a founder-friendly approach, avoiding forced product alignments. The investment in Tofu addresses growing concerns about pre-employment identity risks, particularly as AI tools enable easier impersonation and fraud. Tofu CEO Jason Zoltak described the company's mission as building trust in recruiting amid remote work and AI-driven threats. JumpCloud Ventures has raised $295 million to date.
Study shows widening gap between AI maturity and AI readiness. JumpCloud has released its "Q1 2026 IT Trends Report" that explores the widening gap between AI maturity and AI readiness, and why confidence alone is leaving organizations exposed as AI adoption accelerates announced during its JumpCloudLand virtual conference. Key findings include: ° Only 22% of organizations are truly AI ready, despite 40% self-identifying as AI mature, revealing a significant confidence gap. 60% of IT leaders say AI adoption is outpacing their ability to secure it, a trend that has remained unchanged for three years. ° Shadow AI is widespread, with 61% of organizations reporting unsanctioned AI use, even as many express high confidence in their governance practices. ° Identity and access failures dominate AI risk, with unauthorized access, inconsistent IAM, and non-human identities emerging as top threats. ° IT unification is becoming the foundation of AI readiness, with nearly 90% of IT leaders agreeing that unified infrastructure and centralized IAM are critical to securing AI at scale. ° Investment is accelerating, with more than 9 in 10 organizations expecting IT budget increases in 2026, and half planning to dedicate 11 - 25% of their budget to AI-related initiatives. I hope you'll help support Apple World Today by becoming a patron. Almost all our income is from Patreon support and sponsored posts. Patreon pricing ranges from $2 to $10 a month. Thanks in advance for your support.