In the high-stakes world of software development, where distributed teams span continents and deadlines loom like storm clouds, a new player is emerging from Atlanta. DevHawk.ai, launched on January 14, 2026, positions itself as the first AI agent designed not merely to monitor project management woes but to actively resolve them. Born from the trenches of managing over 150 startup engineering teams via Fraction, the fractional talent platform, DevHawk targets the persistent friction of outsourced and remote work.
Praveen Ghanta, CEO of DevHawk and founder of Fraction, which hit $10 million in annual recurring revenue in 2024 by connecting startups with U.S.-based senior developers on part-time contracts, drew from real-world pain points. ‘We built this because we were living the problem every day,’ Ghanta told Yahoo Finance. His team at Fraction encountered stalled tickets, idle developers, and velocity dips across global squads, issues exacerbated by time zones and vague updates.
The project management sector, generating $6 billion annually, has long prioritized dashboards over deeds, leaving 70% of projects failing to hit targets, per the Project Management Institute cited in the launch announcement on PR Newswire. DevHawk flips the script with agentic AI powered by advanced large language models.
From Visibility to Velocity: Core Features in Action
DevHawk plugs into tools like Jira, Linear, Asana, Slack, and Teams in minutes, scanning metadata—ticket statuses, pull requests, queues—without touching code, ensuring GDPR compliance and enterprise-grade security. Its Intelligent Stall Alerts ping developers on overdue tasks, respecting working hours. Zero Task Detection flags empty queues pre-idle, while Velocity Trend Analysis spots momentum slips before retrospectives. AI-Calculated Story Points deliver consistent complexity estimates, ditching subjective guesses.
Early adopters note sharp cuts in follow-up time and quicker blocker resolution, as detailed on DevHawk’s site. The platform generates automated summaries for standups and retros, focusing on shipped story points over activity. ‘Herding cats is inevitable,’ Ghanta said. ‘But now, AI can take on the glue work.’ On X, he recently echoed Reid Hoffman’s call for AI in unglamorous ops, plugging DevHawk to ease the ‘coordination tax.’
This proactive stance contrasts with passive tools. Traditional PM software flags issues post-escalation; DevHawk intervenes via contextual nudges, escalating only if needed, freeing humans for strategy.
Fraction’s Forge: Battle-Tested Origins
Ghanta’s path traces to bootstrapped exits, including fintech SaaS HiddenLevers sold for 16 times revenue in 2021. Fraction, founded in 2022, scaled by offering fractional CTOs, architects, PMs, and engineers—up to 50% of startup teams—handling project oversight that birthed DevHawk as internal tooling. Cofounders Alyssia Maluda (COO, ex-World Bank), Jeffrey Baker (CRO), CTO Jeremy King, and others bring decades in agile, AI integrations, and global ops, per DevHawk’s about page.
The firm’s $10M ARR milestone, announced via EIN Presswire, underscored demand for managed fractional talent amid offshore pitfalls. DevHawk extends this, targeting leaders weary of babysitting outsourced squads. It augments PMs, not replaces them, emphasizing fairness: early blocker alerts aid developers, not just managers.
Ghanta’s X post highlights PM’s unpopularity: ‘It’s so unloved, everyone hates it… yet the same folks are paying the coordination tax every day.’ Fraction’s model proved fractional hires outperform full-time juniors plus seniors cost-effectively; DevHawk automates the oversight Fraction provided manually.
Plugging into a Heating AI-PM Arena
DevHawk enters as AI reshapes project management. Tools like PMI Infinity offer charter agents; Zapier and Motion tout automations; Productive leverages OpenAI for tasks. Yet TechTarget notes AI shines in admin but falters on allocation sans data. DevHawk’s metadata focus and actions sidestep this, akin to agentic shifts in coding like Cognition’s Devin, though tailored to coordination.
A 14-day free trial, no card needed, yields full access with priority support. Beta pricing teases affordability for startups scaling via Fraction-like models. Integrations respect workflows—no dev changes required—positioning it for rapid uptake amid distributed work’s rise.
Security-first: encrypted data, no code access. As Ghanta told QuickForms, AI accelerates engineering with experienced oversight—DevHawk embodies that for PM.
Team Muscle and Real-World Edge
DevHawk’s squad packs punch: Head of Developer Relations Zahra Ladiwala (ex-recruiter), Founding Engineer Austin Brock (front-end/mobile), Ralph Larke (biz dev). Their bios scream delivery across startups, enterprises, consultancies—shipping across time zones honed DevHawk’s 24/7 vigilance.
‘Traditional tools ask, “How do we give PMs better visibility?” DevHawk asks, “How do we actually manage the work?”‘ Ghanta explained. This LLM-enabled pivot, per PR Newswire, tackles fractional/global models’ grown ‘coordination tax.’ Early feedback: faster blocked work ID, less PM drudgery.
On LinkedIn, Ghanta champions agent networks mimicking human teams, eyeing B2B SaaS realities. DevHawk’s outcomes focus—story points shipped, pace—aligns with Fraction’s profit-driven fractional success.
Outlook: Agents Reshaping Delivery Chains
As AI agents proliferate, DevHawk stakes claim in dev ops’ unglamorous core. With Fraction’s proven playbook and Ghanta’s exits, it eyes the billions in PM software ripe for action over alerts. Trials invite testing; if early wins hold, it could redefine outsourced accountability.
Ghanta’s vision: AI handles glue, humans strategize. In X replies to Hoffman, he bets on PM AI to cut misery. For insiders, DevHawk signals agentic PM’s arrival—watch for adoption spikes as distributed teams seek relief.


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