According to a recent LinkedIn post from Harvey, the company is positioning its technology as part of a broader structural shift in how legal work is performed. The post suggests that high-volume and high-complexity legal tasks are increasingly handled by AI agents that can run workflows end-to-end, enabling lawyers to focus on higher-value judgment and strategy.
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The post highlights that Harvey has raised a new funding round at an $11 billion valuation, co-led by GIC and Sequoia Capital. It also notes that more than 25,000 custom agents are already running on Harvey’s platform, indicating early scale in adoption among legal and enterprise users.
According to the post, the new capital is expected to be used to scale the agents deployed by customers and to expand the company’s legal engineering teams. For investors, this emphasis on converting domain expertise into repeatable systems may signal a strategy aimed at deepening product integration within client workflows and potentially increasing switching costs over time.
The involvement of GIC and Sequoia Capital, as cited in the post, points to continued institutional confidence in the legal-focused AI segment at elevated valuations. If Harvey can translate its agent count and workflow penetration into recurring revenue growth, the funding round may strengthen its competitive position against general-purpose AI platforms targeting the legal market.

