posting velocity //
Opens vs closes per day
Based on 43 events over 28 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
Showing: Israel. Click another pill to switch.
Open now
9
Total active openings across all sites
Δ 28-day
+9
Opens minus closes in the last 28 days
Δ 90-day
+9
Opens minus closes in the last 90 days
posting velocity //
Based on 43 events over 28 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
role mix //
+1
The green layer is the current share of active openings by role. The grey dashed layer is the 90-day baseline — gaps between them show where the company is shifting its hiring mix.
seniority pyramid //
Seniority is not exposed by the source for this company.
Distribution of active openings by seniority. The 'unknown' row groups jobs from sources that don't expose seniority.
geography //
Active openings by region. Click a row to see jobs in that area.
time on market //
Median
21.7 days
25th pct
20.7 days
75th pct
—
Based on 17 closed jobs and 9 still open (right-censored). Curve is Kaplan-Meier; band is the 95% CI.Low event count — the median will stabilise after ~33 more closures. Until then treat the values as indicative.
company intel · ai-generated
Updated 2d ago
Lightricks was founded in 2013 by Zeev Farbman, Nir Pochter, Yaron Inbar, Amit Goldstein, and Itai Tsiddon. The company is headquartered in Jerusalem, Israel. It is a privately held company, last valued at $1.8 billion during a $130 million Series D funding round in late 2021. Lightricks employs roughly 500 to 600 people globally, with the majority of its workforce based in Israel. The core product line consists of photo and video editing software targeting creators, with Facetune being the most recognized app. The most significant recent shift for the company has been its deep integration of generative AI, culminating in the 2024 launch of LTX Studio, an AI-native film and video creation platform.
Lightricks develops consumer and prosumer applications for visual content creation. Its original technological foundation was built on proprietary computational photography and computer graphics engines, developed by founders who were academic researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The products are primarily sold direct-to-consumer via Apple's App Store and Google Play using a freemium SaaS subscription model. In recent years, the engineering focus has expanded from mobile-first image processing to cloud-based generative AI workflows, utilizing diffusion models to generate and manipulate video and images.
Facetune is the company's flagship application, launched in 2013 as a paid app before shifting to a subscription model; it focuses on portrait and selfie editing. The "Leap" suite includes Videoleap, Photoleap, and Motionleap, offering advanced layer-based mobile editing and animation. In early 2024, Lightricks launched LTX Studio, a web-based AI video generation platform that allows filmmakers to generate storyboards, control camera angles, and render video clips using AI models. The company also operates Popular Pay, a platform acquired in 2022 that connects brands with content creators.
Lightricks operates in the highly competitive creator economy software market. Direct competitors include Picsart and Canva in the photo and design space, and ByteDance's CapCut in mobile video editing. While CapCut has captured significant market share in short-form mobile video via its TikTok integration, Lightricks has positioned its newer tools, like LTX Studio, toward a more specialized prosumer and agency market. The company transitioned from a pure mobile utility provider to an AI platform in response to shifting market demands and the commoditization of basic mobile editing tools.
The company's primary headquarters is located in Jerusalem, making it one of the largest privately held tech companies operating in the city. Lightricks also maintains an R&D site in Haifa. The founding team and a large portion of the R&D organization are Israeli, with strong historical ties to the Hebrew University's computer science departments. In response to macroeconomic shifts, Lightricks implemented workforce reductions in mid-2022, laying off approximately 12% of its global team. The company typically hires in Israel for core algorithms, iOS/Android engineering, and increasingly, machine learning and AI research roles.
key people & leadership
7 key people, sourced from public records — with a per-row confidence score.
Yaron Inbar
Co-Founder
Nir Pochter
Co-Founder
Co-founder of Lightricks (2013), contributing to the company's technical foundations in image processing developed at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Itai Tsiddon
Co-Founder
Window: 180 days back. Don't read the mean — the long tail biases it. Median and percentiles are the honest summary.
Republish rate
0.0%
0 / 24 of closed jobs reposted within 60 days
hiring signal · from our data
From our job data · always current
9 open roles in Israel
news feed
No recent news about this company.