Miravoice Raises $6.3M Seed to Scale AI-Powered Voice Surveys and Interviews
Funding Details
$6.3M
Seed
Most teams avoid long-form voice surveys for the same reason people avoid carrying cash in a digital world. It works, it’s trusted, but it’s slow, expensive, and doesn’t scale without friction. Miravoice looked at that friction and treated it like a solvable problem instead of a permanent tax.
Miravoice just pulled in $6.3M in seed funding, led by Unusual Ventures with Neo and 25madison in the mix. That’s not tourist capital. That’s conviction money. The kind that shows up when the room realizes something foundational is getting rebuilt, not just polished.
Credit to Co-Founder and CEO Nishant Jain and Co-Founder and CTO Danny D. Leybzon for seeing what most teams miss. Voice isn’t new. Surveys aren’t familiar territory for most engineers. But structured, long-form, high-integrity conversations at scale without human constraints is where this starts to separate. Add Co-Founder and COO Shreyas Tirumala to the equation and you get a team that understands both the math and the mess behind real-world data collection.
Miravoice isn’t chasing chatter. It’s engineered for discipline. We’re talking 120+ question surveys, 40+ minute calls, real branching logic, and the ability to handle interruptions without losing the thread. That’s not a chatbot trying its best. That’s infrastructure for truth in a world that usually settles for “close enough.”
And the traction isn’t hypothetical. Over 100,000+ production calls in 2025. Customers like NORC at the University of Chicago and SSRS. 10–20 active customers already running pilots or full deployments. When pilots are pushing tens of thousands of calls, you’re not testing anymore. You’re rehearsing scale.
The sharper angle here is economic gravity. Traditional call centers made voice surveys the gold standard that nobody wanted to pay for. Miravoice turns that equation on its head with usage-based pricing tied to time on the phone. Clean, measurable, and aligned with outcomes. Voice data stops being a luxury line item and starts behaving like infrastructure.
Under the hood, the platform blends large language models with voice systems that stay on script. No wandering. No hallucinating their way into bad data. Just structured conversations that actually respect the integrity of the questionnaire. That’s a subtle flex in a market crowded with tools that love to improvise when they shouldn’t.
Unusual Ventures, Neo, and 25madison didn’t just fund a product. They backed a shift in how organizations listen at scale. When voice becomes as deployable as a web form, entire industries start hearing things they’ve been missing. Miravoice isn’t louder than the market. It’s clearer. And clarity, especially at scale, tends to compound in ways people only notice after it’s too late to catch up.








