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Shift AI Podcast: Cultivating the next wave of AI startups, with Yifan Zhang of the AI2 Incubator

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Yifan Zhang, now managing director of the AI2 Incubator, speaks at a 2018 Tech Alliance event in Seattle. (GeekWire File Photo / Kaitlyn Wang)

As the managing director of the AI2 Incubator, where she plays an active role in investing in the next wave of AI-first companies, Yifan Zhang shares a nuanced view on the pace and impact of AI innovation in the workforce.

“There’s a lot of hype around AI, and I do think that it is going to take longer for AI to really deeply change most areas of work,” she says. “It’s going to start slow and then come all at once, but at the end of all that, I hope that our work becomes more strategic versus more execution oriented.”

That’s one of her many insights in this episode of Shift AI, a show that explores what it takes to adapt to the changing workplace in the digital age of remote work and AI.

We discuss Yifan’s early successes as a startup founder and explore her new role as a leader in the Seattle technology ecosystem incubating young AI companies and helping them grow.

Listen below, and continue reading for highlights from her comments, edited for context and clarity. Subscribe to Shift AI and hear more episodes at ShiftAIPodcast.com

Background and early experiences: I am an immigrant. I came from China to the U.S. when I was seven. Grew up in Indiana, of all places — not a lot of other Chinese immigrants — and then went to Harvard. When I was in school, I definitely did not know anything about entrepreneurship. I didn’t know it was possible to go out and just start a company. But I fell in with a group that ended up all becoming either entrepreneurs or VCs. It was the Harvard Entrepreneurship Forum which was the first iteration of many entrepreneurial groups now at Harvard. So I started my first company, GymPact, basically right after graduation. I was 22 when I started that company. 

Early startup experience: GymPact was based on a paper I wrote my senior year at Harvard around financial incentives, specifically negative incentives and the ability to motivate really hard behavior change. So it was a fitness app, and became one of the top fitness apps back in the day, back in the 2012, 2015 era. We were the app that charged you for not exercising and paid you if you did. So we use financial motivation to track your exercise and verify to really create an incentive system to drive behavior change. Now, looking back, people think it’s a really obvious use case, but I think at the time it was seen as really crazy and out there. Mobile phones were new, mobile apps were new, and the idea of using financial incentives like that attracted a lot of attention.

A focus on housing: I started my second company, Loftium, which is an affordable housing startup. We help people become homeowners by creating part of their home, an income-generating short-term rental so they could save up a down payment and become a homeowner within three years. We call it ‘host to own.’ That company I started here in Seattle after traveling for a bit and living in different cities and deciding Seattle was a really great base to start another company. Loftium raised almost $30 million in venture capital and then put together almost $100 million in asset-backed debt to be able to actually own real estate across the country. And we sold that company to Flyhomes here in Seattle early last year, in 2023.

AI2 Incubator’s unique approach to startups: Right now, there’s a lot of “out-of-the-box” solutions in AI, especially after the launch of ChatGPT, but we think that the out-of-the-box solutions are really only good for 80% of what is acceptable to an actual customer. It’s really easy to build a dazzling prototype right now. It is very hard to take that prototype to something that’s actually usable, like an MVP. AI2 Incubator is really looking for those use cases where we think we can help a company go from 80% up to 90%, 95%, whatever acceptability looks like in a startup’s timeframe. So that’s less than two years on a pre-seed or seed budget.

The three T’s of company building: I have talked at the incubator with our companies about what I call the three T’s. What investors look for is team, traction, and technology, and depending on your stage, whether you’re pre-seed or seed, you need to check off one, two or three of these T’s. It also kind of depends on how hyped the VC cycle is. I think right now, given that VC is much tougher, including in AI, we’re encouraging our founders to be able to check off at least two of these T’s and ideally make progress on the third T, but you can choose which T’s you’re checking off. 

Choosing the AI2 Incubator over standard investor roles: I actually hadn’t been thinking about going over to the investor side of the table, but I found the incubator model very interesting. There is a lot of room for me as a founder to come in and help the companies and work very directly with the companies versus being a standard investor, where you just chase a deal, select the founders, and then really you’re not getting to spend that much time on the building process. I really like the incubator process and the fact that AI2 Incubator is not a cohort-based program. We think of ourselves as a co-founder that comes with a $500,000 check. We put in both money, our own time and expertise, and I personally was very attracted to that.

The future of work: I think the future of work post-AI is going to be strategic. There’s a lot of hype around AI, and I do think that it is going to take longer for AI to really deeply change most areas of work. It’s going to start slow and then come all at once, but at the end of all that, I hope that our work becomes more strategic versus more execution oriented. There is so much of our time that’s spent on things that take longer than they should, and we try to automate and optimize as much of it as possible…and hopefully there’s still a role for us. I could see that, and I would be very happy with that type of world.

Listen to the full episode of Shift AI with AI2 Incubator Managing Director Yifan Zhang here.


Tech Moves: F5 adds CTO and HR chief; Adaptive names CFO; Techstars Seattle leaders depart

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F5 Chief People Officer Lyra Schramm (left) and Chief Technology Officer Kunal Anand. (F5 Photos)

— Seattle-based application security and delivery giant F5 announced two new executive appointments this week: Lyra Schramm, the company’s new chief people officer, and Kunal Anand, chief technology officer.

Schramm comes from Google, where she spent nearly a decade in various human resources leadership roles, most recently as vice president of people strategy. She also previously worked at the Gates Foundation as a deputy director, and at Amazon as head of talent acquisition for AWS.

Anand is the former chief technology officer and chief information security officer at Imperva, a cybersecurity company recently acquired by Thales. He previously co-founded Prevoty, which was acquired by Imperva in 2018, and led technology efforts at BBC and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Both new execs will hold executive vice president titles.

F5 reported $693 million in revenue for its most recent quarter, down 1% year-over-year. Its stock is up 8% this year.

Other key personnel changes across the Pacific Northwest tech industry:

— Adaptive Biotechnologies named Kyle Piskel as its new chief financial officer. Piskel joined the Seattle-based biotech company in 2015 and was most recently principal accounting officer. He replaces Tycho Peterson, who is departing to pursue another opportunity.

Adaptive also announced this week that it will restructure its Minimal Residual Disease (MRD) and Immune Medicine businesses and continue running both within the company. Adaptive previously hired Goldman Sachs to explore “strategic alternatives” for the businesses. The company’s stock was down more than 9% on Wednesday.

Bryan Copley, CEO and co-founder of Seattle real estate data startup CityBldr, is now a planning commissioner for the City of Redmond. “Excited to build the future Redmond,” Copley wrote on LinkedIn.

Meir Lakhovsky, a longtime Seattle-based product leader, joined enterprise AI startup Gradient as vice president of product management.

— Seattle-based cannabis software company Leafly announced that Michael Blue resigned as chair of its board. The company also added Jeffrey Monat and Andres Nannetti to its board, and appointed Alan Pickerill as new chair of the board.

Former Techstars Seattle managing director Marius Ciocirlan speaks at the accelerator’s Demo Day in January. Techstars announced one month later that it was shutting down the Seattle program. (GeekWire Photo / Taylor Soper)

— Former Techstars Seattle leaders Marius Ciocirlan and Sarah Studer announced that they are exploring new opportunities outside of Techstars following the surprise shutdown of the startup accelerator in February.

Ciocirlan joined Techstars Seattle in 2022 as its managing director. Techstars said in February that Ciocirlan would become managing director for the remote-first Techstars Anywhere program. But he wrote on LinkedIn last week that he’s moving on from the company.

Sarah Studer.

“I was honored for the opportunity to have led the Techstars Seattle Accelerator and to have invested in and supported 36 companies,” wrote on LinkedIn.

Before joining Techstars, Ciocirlan co-founded ShareGrid, a marketplace for filmmakers and photographers to rent and sell their equipment that was acquired by Backstage. He was also a product designer for Groupon, Kromatic Entertainment, and Samsung.

Studer, a longtime fixture in Seattle’s startup community, joined Techstars Seattle in 2021 and was director of platform. Techstars had offered Studer a new position within Techstars. But she is also moving on.

“I’ve had the privilege of supporting founders from 60 companies during my tenure, and the experiences I have gained and the relationships I’ve formed have been invaluable – what a great ride!” she wrote on LinkedIn.

Studer, former managing director of Impact Hub Seattle and assistant director of the University of Washington’s entrepreneurship program, is currently working a contract role as “chief storyteller” for TrueMedia, a new Seattle-based nonprofit aiming to combat misinformation and identify deepfakes.

Carson Nye, previously an investment manager at Techstars Seattle, is now at Two Ravens, a new venture firm in Seattle led by former Techstars Seattle managing director Isaac Kato.

More than 160 startups participated in the core Techstars Seattle accelerator since it launched in 2010. Techstars said in February it plans to focus on cities with higher concentration of venture capital activity.

Seattle startup KredosAI raises more cash to help companies collect late payments

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KredosAI, a Seattle-based enterprise software startup that helps companies collect late payments from customers, raised more cash to fuel growth.

  • Founded in 2020 by former T-Mobile execs Balaji Sridharan and Dave Thoms, Kredos uses artificial intelligence to help communicate with customers who fall behind on payments.
  • The idea is to help companies recoup revenue lost to missed payments. Delinquency rates are rising across various industries.
  • A new SEC filing shows $2.1 million raised in fresh capital. Kredos declined to reveal the amount raised, but said StartFast Ventures, an early stage firm based in Syracuse, N.Y., led the most recent round of funding.
  • The company previous raised around $1 million. Other backers include SeaChange Fund, SaaS Ventures, Stout Street Capital, Okapi Ventures, and Early Light Ventures.

Tech Moves: Ex-Smartsheet CMO lands at Conga; former Panopto CMO joins Valid8

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Andrew Bennett. (LinkedIn Photo)

— Andrew Bennett, the former chief marketing officer at Smartsheet, is now chief marketing officer at Conga, a Denver-area startup that helps companies manage revenue.

Bennett, based in Seattle, previously spent a decade at Bellevue, Wash.-based Smartsheet in various marketing leadership roles. He became CMO in 2021 and held that position until departing last month.

Founded in 2006, Conga serves more than 11,000 customers with software that helps streamline and simplify revenue-related operations such as proposals, billing, and renewals. The company has 18 employees in the Seattle region.

Bennett previously was a vice president at Onyx, where he worked alongside Smartsheet CEO Mark Mader. Bennett also founded Deneki Outdoors, which operated fly fishing lodges around the globe.

Other key personnel changes across the Pacific Northwest tech industry:

Christina Mautz. (LinkedIn Photo)

— Christina Mautz, the former chief marketing officer at Moz and Panopto, joined Seattle-based fintech startup Valid8 Financial as executive vice president for marketing.

Mautz was most recently a “fractional CMO” and consultant. She spent nearly a year at video management company Panopto and led marketing at SEO firm Moz for more than three years. Mautz also held marketing roles at Koru, Amazon, and Yahoo.

Founded in 2017, Valid8 sells a forensic accounting platform to lawyers, CPAs, and other enterprise and government customers that use the software to organize and analyze the flow of funds. It recently raised $8.5 million in a Series A round. The company also announced that Brett Suchor is taking on an expanded role as executive vice president for strategic partnerships.

— Seattle-area business technology company Acumatica added two longtime software leaders as new board members: Nancy Harris and Zach Nelson. Harris was an exec at Sage North America and also worked for Asure Software. Nelson is the former CEO of NetSuite and held leadership positions at Sun Microsystems, Oracle, and McAfee Network Associates.

— Seattle-based coding bootcamp Ada Developers Academy announced that interim CEO Shawna Young is stepping down to take a new role with Camelback Ventures as CEO. Young joined Ada last year after it reduced headcount and paused admissions. Tina-Marie Gulley, a longtime Ada board member, will assume interim CEO duties.

— Seattle-based pet insurance company Trupanion announced that Maveron co-founder Dan Levitan and Bond Vet co-founder Dr. Zay Satchu will be stepping down from the board following the company’s annual meeting this year.

Seattle-area mental health startup focused on serving first responders is raising cash

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Colleen Hilton, CEO and co-founder of Alli Connect. (Alli Connect Photo)

Mental health challenges can be doubly difficult for first responders such as firefighters and police officers. Their jobs have higher-than-average levels of trauma, stress and danger. There are also deterrents to getting help, including a stigma for first responders seeking mental health care. And some worry they could lose their job if someone assumed they were unfit for duty because they wanted therapy.

“There’s still a perception that they have to be superhuman — ‘I’m not supposed to need help. I’m super tough, I can handle all of this,'” said Colleen Hilton, co-founder of Alli Connect, a Seattle-area startup that delivers mental health services to first responders through a confidential, easy-to-use service.

The Alli Connect platform provides routine mental health and wellness assessments, which might reveal depression, anxiety or other struggles that would benefit from therapy. The startup aims to get people into care before they burn out, are compromised on the job, or experience a mental health crisis.

If a first responder wants to meet with a therapist, Alli Connect acts as a matchmaker, using an AI-assisted tool to find a suitable provider. The platform also provides mental health education.

A 2023 report ordered by President Biden addressing first responders’ mental health called out the significant need to improve care. “[R]esearch demonstrates that law enforcement occupations can contribute to diminished psychological health and well-being that can have negative effects on personnel (and their families) and public safety,” the document states.

Other studies show that firefighters and police officers have rates of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder that are as much as five-times higher than the civilian population.

The Alli Connect interface.

Alli Connect aims to be part of the solution.

The startup sells its service to police and fire departments and other agencies that want to provide employees, their families, and department retirees with care.

The platform is now available nationally, after initially focusing on Washington. Fire and police chiefs in the state have responded favorably, saying the platform fills a major gap in wellness.

Hilton, a licensed therapist who was married to a police officer for a decade, launched the company in 2020 under the name Thrivelution. Two co-founders have since exited and Hilton, who is CEO, rebranded and rebooted in April 2023.

A new SEC filing reveals that the company is raising a round of capital. The company declined to provide details about the funding.

The startup this week announced that former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona has joined its industry advisory board. In addition to his medical experience, Carmona is a U.S. Army veteran and worked as a deputy sheriff.

Patrick Madden, senior vice president and general manager at Axon, a leading police body camera company also known for its Taser devices, is on Alli Connect’s board of directors. He’s also an investor in the round currently being raised.

While the nation has a shortage of mental health providers, Hilton said her company has not struggled to find therapists. The providers matched through Alli Connect are not employees of the company and do not pay to be included on the platform, and retain their private practices.

Alli Connect screens the therapists to ensure that they have personal or professional experience that would provide skills and expertise for working with first responders. That “cultural competency” is key, Hilton said, for the therapist to earn the trust and confidence of their client. Care is delivered either in-person or through telehealth.

The company would like to keep expanding its reach, possibly serving members of the military and veterans.

“We have big goals to really be able to support a much wider group of Americans, and hopefully even [go] globally someday,” Hilton said. These are “the individuals who are putting their lives on the line for the rest of us.”

Alli Connect is co-headquartered in Snohomish, Wash., and Boston.

Richard Kasperowski is a co-founder and chief technology officer of Alli Connect. He also teaches agile software development at Harvard University and his background includes leadership in software development and engineering.

Nathan Leatherwood recently joined from CivicEye as head of growth.

The team has eight employees and is looking to add four more by the end of the year.

Health Innovation of the Year: 5 finalists at the GeekWire Awards use tech to improve healthcare

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The five finalists for the Health Innovation of the Year at the GeekWire Awards highlight the multitude of ways that technology is changing healthcare, from treatment in the hospital to the development of new therapeutics.

This category highlights pioneering health, life science, biotechnology or medical breakthroughs that hold great promise for bettering our lives or improving the healthcare system.

Read more about the finalists and cast your vote below.

Last year’s winner in this category was AltPep, a Seattle startup developing a test that could detect signs of Alzheimer’s disease. The company on Monday published successful results from its latest research.

The GeekWire Awards recognize the top innovators and companies in Pacific Northwest technology. Finalists in this category and others were selected based on community nominations, along with input from GeekWire Awards judges. Community voting across all categories will continue until April 12, combined with feedback from judges to determine the winner in each category.

We’ll announce the winners live on stage at Showbox SoDo in Seattle on May 9. There are a limited number of table sponsorships available to attend the event. Learn more and sign up to attend on the GeekWire Awards event site.

If interested in sponsoring a category or purchasing a table sponsorship for the event, contact us at events@geekwire.com.

Special thanks to Astound Business Solutions, the presenting sponsor of the 2024 GeekWire Awards.

Submit your vote here or below, and read more about the five finalists for Health Innovation of the Year:

  • A-Alpha Bio: This Seattle startup, a spinout of the Institute for Protein Design at the University of Washington, combines computational tools with yeast experiments to identify potentially therapeutic proteins. It partners with drug companies to help them find the best agents to test on a range of conditions. The startup was co-founded in 2017 by CEO David Younger and CTO Randolph Lopez, using the technology they helped to develop while graduate researchers at the UW. The company, which raised $22.4 million in July, was a finalist in this category in 2022.
  • AdaptX: Originally known as MDMetrix, this Seattle startup uses AI to help healthcare providers analyze medical data from their electronic medical records to detect patterns and trends that might indicate ways to improve care or reveal inefficiencies in how care is delivered. It raised $10 million in November in a round led by Cercano Management. The company is led by CEO Warren Ratliff and was started in 2016 by a pediatric anesthesiologist, Dr. Dan Low.
  • adyn: Elizabeth Russo founded this Seattle startup after her own journey finding a birth control method that didn’t make her miserable. The company’s birth control test analyzes key hormone levels and DNA, among other markers, and provides personalized medication recommendations. Adyn also aims to harness its data for research. The company raised $2.5 million in 2021 from investors including 23andMe CEO Anne Wojcicki.
  • CalmWave: The spinout of the Al2 Incubator in Seattle aims to make the hospital a quieter place by using software to help reduce alarms from devices attached to patients in the ICU. CalmWave CEO and co-founder Ophir Ronen previoulsy founded Event Enrichment HQ, a Seattle startup that helped companies respond to IT-related events and was acquired by PagerDuty. CalmWave, which raised $4 million in 2022, won the UX Design of the Year category last year.
  • Proprio: The University of Washington startup wants to change surgery with a system that enables surgeons to see key structures on a screen in three dimensions in real time. The company’s system, called Paradigm, helps clinicians place incisions and guide placement of hardware, such as devices that can help straighten a spine. The 8-year-old company, led by CEO Gabriel Jones, last year received a key FDA clearance and raised $43 million. It hit another milestone in November after a successful first-in-human use of Paradigm.

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PairTree, a Seattle startup that facilitates adoptions, raises more cash to fuel expansion

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PairTree CEO Erin Quick makes her Elevator Pitch at the GeekWire Summit in Seattle in October 2022. (GeekWire Photo / Dan DeLong)

PairTree, a startup that matches expectant moms with families who are eager to adopt, is expanding into a full-service platform that supports multiple aspects of the adoption process.

The Seattle-based company recently raised $650,000 to fund the effort. Investors include Urban Innovation Group, Trust Ventures and Cubit Capital. Total funding to date is $7.85 million.

To broaden its services, PairTree is bringing professionals onto the platform who can facilitate the adoption process. That includes adoption lawyers and agencies, as well as state-licensed workers who conduct required home studies to screen and approve families looking to adopt.

The site connects all players in a highly fragmented ecosystem into one online community, helping participants nationwide navigate adoptions.

“Until everybody is connected on one platform, we can’t create the change that we’re all craving in the industry,” said PairTree co-founder and CEO Erin Quick. “So it’s a huge endeavor. But it’s one that has a massive upside.”

PairTree provides quality control, hosting only ethical, licensed adoption professionals on its site. Quick has set a goal this year of getting 30 agencies, attorneys and home study providers to sign on exclusively with the platform. The count is now at 16. That includes a provider that conducts home studies for families interesting in fostering a child, which provides additional routes to adoption.

Families looking to adopt pay PairTree for packages that can include creating a profile, promotion on social media, education on adoption, and receiving a home study.

Quick founded PairTree in 2020, inspired by her own challenging and expensive journey that resulted in the adoption of two children.

PairTree originally marketed itself as a cheaper, faster alternative to traditional adoptions, reducing the need to use attorneys and agencies in states that don’t require their services. Quick said the company still provides both of those benefits by streamlining the process, even when families hire adoption professionals.

Jonathan and Carlos are one of the couples on the PairTree platform who are hoping to adopt. (Screenshot from PairTree website)

As part of her mission to broadly improve the sector, Quick is working to create the National Consortium of Ethical Adoption Professionals. The organization would protect against scams and establish safeguards. That includes providing support for birth mothers, facilitating open adoptions in which a birth mother retains contact with an adopting family, and ensuring that potential birth mothers aren’t pressured into adoption.

Consortium members would also agree to serving a diversity of families. Many adoption organizations have religious affiliations and some states allow adoption agencies to refuse to work with certain clients, including gay couples or single mothers.

The values all align with ethics that PairTree has embraced.

Its 8-person team includes a mom who has gone through the adoption process twice and can advise other expectant mothers,. The company gives 5% of fees paid by adopting families to organizations supporting birth mothers. It is also committed to working with LGBTQ families and different religious beliefs.

New study for early detection of Alzheimer’s shows promising results

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Valerie Daggett, co-founder and CEO at AltPep, accepts the award for Health Innovation of the Year at the 2023 GeekWire Awards. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)

A new test for the early detection of Alzheimer’s Disease — potentially even before symptoms are present — show that the diagnostic caught the neurodegenerative disease in 100% of the samples from patients symptomatic for Alzheimer’s.

Researchers at the University of Washington and Seattle biotech startup AltPep are building on a track record of success with their latest publication.

Their study used 265 blood plasma samples from two different organizations and tested them in two different laboratories by different personnel.

The assay detects a certain kind of misformed, clumped protein or “oligomers” that disrupt normal brain function and as Alzheimer’s progresses form larger clumps and plaques. The defective proteins are called Amyloid‑beta (Aβ) toxic oligomers. The test from AltPep is called the Soluble Oligomer Binding Assay (SOBA‑AD).

The research was published Thursday in the journal Nature’s Scientific Reports.

“Ultimately, we want this to be used as a screening device for everybody 40 years of age and up.”

– Valerie Daggett, co-founder and CEO of AltPep

The study builds on earlier successful results with the assay. Two years ago the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted AltPep with a “breakthrough device designation,” conferring a prioritized status for approval for the test.

Valerie Daggett, a UW bioengineering professor and CEO of AltPep, hopes the company can get FDA approval for the assay over the next 12 months and start commercialization.

“Ultimately, we want this to be used as a screening device for everybody 40 years of age and up,” Daggett said.

In addition to the work on the diagnostic assay, the 5-year old startup is also developing a treatment for Alzheimer’s — again targeting the disease as early as possible — and is researching a test and treatment for Parkinson’s disease.

AltPep has raised $76 million from investors and won Health Innovation of the Year at last year’s GeekWire Awards.

The company last week held a grand opening for its new lab, located inside a new life sciences building on Eastlake Avenue that’s part of a growing biotech hub in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood.

The move was a welcome change, Daggett said. The former location “not only was not the greatest lab space, which affected what we could do, but we were space limited,” she said. “So we are really accelerating our programs now and hiring.”

AltPep currently has about 36 employees.

In October, AltPep moved it operations into a new life sciences building at 1150 Eastlake Ave in Seattle. The building celebrated its grand opening on Friday. (Alexandria Real Estate Equities Photo)

Healthcare providers can detect Alzheimer’s using PET scans, but that technology is suitable for people who have had the disease for perhaps a decade or more and begun forming visible plaques in their brains. Daggett is aiming for earlier detection and treatment in the hope of catching the illness before neurological damage has occurred.

One of the additional advantages of the SOBA-AD test is it’s effective on blood plasma, and does not require cerebrospinal fluid that’s collected through a spinal tap, which carries greater risks and discomfort than a blood draw.

While the new study of the assay identified all of the cases of Alzheimer’s, it also had five false positives among the control samples. These results showed a lower signal of the toxic protein. It’s possible some or all of the five came from patients who were not yet symptomatic for the disease.

Daggett is eager to continue testing her assay against more samples, particularly those with greater racial and ethnic diversity in the patients. The most recent samples were a step in that direction, she said, but not enough.

Still, the results are encouraging.

“It’s fantastic. It’s confirmatory,” Daggett said. “It’s nice to see these things starting to really come together. But on the other hand, you just have to keep doing it. There’s no one test where you go,’OK, done and over.’ You’re constantly proving it.”

Co-authors on the paper are Amy Chen and Dylan Shea.


Former Bungie directors lead new unit within Seattle-area game studio ProbablyMonsters

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The leadership team at ProbablyMonsters’ newest studio, Hidden Grove. Back row, left to right: Kate Welch, Dean Johnson, Raylene Deck, Grant Mackay, and Lori Ada Kilty. Front row, left to right: Chris Opdahl, Jedd Chevrier. (ProbablyMonsters Image)

ProbablyMonsters, a game studio collective headquartered in Bellevue, Wash., announced Tuesday that it’s founded a new internal development team called Hidden Grove.

The team at Hidden Grove is headed by general manager Chris Opdahl and design directors Raylene Deck and Grant Mackay. All three are former developers on Bungie’s MMO shooter Destiny 2 who first landed at ProbablyMonsters in 2020.

Hidden Grove’s debut project is an “original multiplayer competitive adventure game” in Unreal Engine 5. According to a ProbablyMonsters representative, the project has been “in incubation” and is only now being announced.

Other members of the new team include executive producer Lori Ada Kilty, a former program manager at Xbox Game Studios; art director Jedd Chevrier, freelance illustrator and former creative lead at Microsoft Hololens; senior engineering director Dean Johnson, a former engineering manager at Microsoft and 343 Industries; and narrative director Kate Welch, former lead designer at Wizards of the Coast.

Founded in 2016 by former Bungie CEO Harold Ryan, ProbablyMonsters bills itself as “building a family of sustainable game studios through a people-first culture.” Ryan told GeekWire in 2019 that the role of ProbablyMonsters is to “manage the business side for [its studios] and help them to grow,” while maintaining a path for each studio to go independent.

The company went through a round of layoffs in September.

ProbablyMonsters also announced on Tuesday that it hired Adam Rymer as its new chief product officer. Rymer, the former CEO of e-sports firm OpTic Gaming and former president of Nerdist Industries, will report directly to Ryan.

Hidden Grove is the newest ProbablyMonsters team to go public, joining Battle Barge, which is in development on an unnamed “next-gen” cooperative RPG, and Cauldron, which halted development on its debut project in June.

Another team, Firewalk Studios, was acquired by Sony last year, which revealed Firewalk’s debut game Concord as a PlayStation exclusive last May.

Workout training startup Volt Athletics acquires ZAMA Health

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Seattle startup Volt Athletics announced the acquisition of ZAMA Health, a Washington D.C.-based company that provides mental health services to athletes. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

  • Founded in 2013, Volt develops a strength and conditioning app for personalized workouts. Its users include coaches, athletes, firefighters, and soldiers.
  • The acquisition of ZAMA will help Volt add mental health and wellness features to its app. ZAMA founder and CEO Brendan Sullivan, who started the company in 2022, will join Volt as general manager of athlete wellbeing.
  • “We collectively recognize athletes need more than just operational systems or clinical care — they require a holistic solution that integrates education, mindfulness practices, coach instruction, community support, and cutting-edge technology that seamlessly integrates into their daily routines,” Sullivan wrote on LinkedIn.

This energy startup wants to make utility data more accessible — and spur creation of new companies

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From left, Bayou Energy’s Joris Van Hecke, Kalen Luciano and James Gordey on a team hike at Tolmie Peak in Mount Rainier National Park. (Bayou Energy Photo)

Seattle startup Bayou Energy has raised a $1.2 million pre-seed round. The company has developed technology that pulls customer data from U.S. utilities to provide real-time information on energy use as well as consumption over time.

The data are useful to a variety of businesses, particularly those deploying clean energy products. That includes companies installing heat pumps that need to figure out the right-size device for a space. Or a solar installer who needs to tell a customer how much energy they can expect to put back on the grid. Other businesses need the data to track their own energy use and emissions. The list goes on.

More than 40 companies are using Bayou’s product, though not all are paying customers.

“We’re building tools for people to start their energy companies,” said James Gordey, Bayou’s co-founder and CEO.

The company, which launched in late 2022, can access data from 24 utilities, capturing 44% of the U.S. market. Bayou’s goal is to hit 96 utilities by the end of the year, covering 90% of the nation.

Investors in the round include Surface Ventures, CoFound Partners, Leap Forward VenturesStepchange Ventures and Very Serious Ventures.

“Accessing utility data today is exactly where banking data and payments was in 2009 — extremely painful, bottlenecked by a long sales process, poor developer and user experience, and slow data access times,” said Ben Eidelson, a general partner at Stepchange.

Stripe, Plaid and other fintech companies upended those transactions, Eidelson said, and when it comes to energy, “Bayou is going to have a similar impact.”

Dimitri Boguslavsky, co-managing partner at Surface Ventures, praised the startup’s focus on building a product specifically for developers to use and predicted it will “accelerate the pace of innovation in the energy industry.”

Gordey lives in Seattle, but came from Louisiana and graduated from Louisiana State University with a degree in civil engineering. Many graduates in his field and in that location follow careers in oil and gas, and so did he — but not for long.

“I figured out that’s not the best fit for me,” Gordey said.

His previous job was senior technical product manager for the battery company Proterra. He met Joris Van Hecke, his co-founder and Bayou’s chief technology officer, on a climate-focused Slack channels.

“Climate felt like the only thing I could and wanted to work on,” Gordey said.

Van Hecke previously worked in healthcare technology in Belgium and now lives in New York. Kalen Luciano, Bayou’s backend software engineering intern, is based in Pittsburgh.

Competitors in the space include UtilityAPI and Arcadia.

Building a more mature Seattle startup ecosystem: A conversation with Peter Mueller of Breakwater

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Seattle, with its tech giants like Amazon and Microsoft, has the potential to be a top-tier startup ecosystem. However, according to Peter Mueller, co-founder and managing partner at Breakwater Ventures, there’s a missing “middle layer” hindering its growth. 

In a recent episode of the Startup Project podcast, Mueller discussed his experience in venture capital, the gaps in Seattle’s funding landscape, and Breakwater’s investment thesis. 

Listen below, and continue reading for highlights from his comments, edited for context and clarity. Subscribe to Startup Project and hear more episodes at thestartupproject.io.

From financial analyst to startup champion

Mueller’s journey to venture capital began unconventionally. Starting in financial services, he witnessed the rise of tech companies and realized he wanted to be in the business of technology. Drawn to the building and innovation in the tech world, he made his way to San Francisco and landed at Carta, where he helped build their valuation business segment.

After a stint in private equity, Mueller arrived in Seattle, attracted by the city’s growing tech talent pool. He observed a shift from a primarily developer-focused environment to one with specialized roles in product and sales, indicating the potential for a thriving startup scene. 

Filling the gaps in Seattle’s funding landscape

Despite its potential, Seattle’s startup ecosystem lacks a crucial element: a robust “middle layer” of Series A, B, and C companies. This gap, according to Mueller, is primarily due to insufficient capital being deployed at the pre-seed and seed stages. He argues that the current risk-averse nature of angel investors and the tendency towards over-analysis are hindering the growth of promising startups. 

He contrasts Seattle’s angel investing landscape with other markets, where decisions are made faster and with an emphasis on faster due diligence. This difference, he believes, discourages founders who need quick and decisive funding to build momentum. 

Breakwater Ventures: Investing in velocity and domain expertise

Breakwater, Mueller’s latest venture, seeks to fill this funding gap by providing institutional risk capital at the pre-seed stage of startup investments. The firm focuses on software-centric founders in Seattle and Vancouver, primarily in fintech, AI/ML, marketplaces, and vertical SaaS. 

Breakwater VC seeks to identify founders who are “hyper-focused” on specific use cases and demonstrate an aggressive approach to problem-solving. Additionally, the firm sees significant potential in Vancouver’s startup scene, fueled by Canada’s welcoming immigration policies and government support for startups. 

Investment trends and AI

Mueller believes that the rise of generative AI and LLM hype led to many “GPT wrapper” companies without defensibility. He also believes there will be more focus on multi-agent, multi-modal AI applications.

While storytelling remains important, technical depth and a strong understanding of the evolving technology landscape are becoming increasingly crucial. He encourages founders to be more deliberate about fundraising, considering bootstrapping options and avoiding the “VC treadmill” of large rounds and inflated valuations. 

To listen to the full conversation and learn more about Peter Mueller’s insights, check out the Startup Project podcast episode here. Subscribe in Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube.

Seattle firm Curious makes first acquisition, buying infrastructure platform Convox

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Curious, a new Seattle investment firm that looks to buy software startups with limited funding options, acquired Convox, a 10-year-old infrastructure company that helps developers deploy and scale applications.

  • Founded in 2014 by former Heroku engineers, Convox participated in the Y Combinator accelerator and went through multiple ownership changes.
  • This is the first acquisition from Curious, which raised $16 million last year and is led by former Bitly CMO Andrew Dumont.
  • Curious targets software companies producing annual recurring revenue between $500,000 to $5 million that are running out of cash or not meeting growth expectations for a future investment round.
  • “This is a great case study and example of the work we love to do,” Dumont wrote on LinkedIn. “Taking a brand that had largely been forgotten or a cap table that may not believe in the long-term potential of the business, and working to reset that business with fresh eyes and frameworks for the future.”

Seattle studio Mega Crit reveals sequel to surprise indie-game hit ‘Slay the Spire’

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(Mega Crit screenshot)

Slay the Spire 2, a sequel to the hit 2019 video game, is planned for release next year via Steam Early Access.

Its developer, the Seattle-based studio Mega Crit, made the announcement during Wednesday’s Triple-i Initiative Showcase, a livestreamed event that highlighted multiple new and upcoming indie video game projects.

The original Slay the Spire has quietly become one of the most influential computer games of the last decade. It’s a clever fusion between collectible deck-building card games and a “roguelike” dungeon crawler, where players explore a randomized dungeon in a dark fantasy world.

Each battle is conducted by playing cards, and victory rewards you with more cards and relics. The challenge is to slap together a winning strategy on the fly from whatever you can find before the game’s dangers grind you down.

Slay the Spire first came out for PCs in 2017, and spent two years in Early Access on Steam before its full release in January 2019. Despite a slow initial start, it sold more than 1.5 million copies by the following March, according to co-creator Casey Yano, and has since been ported to mobile devices and every major console.

Yano is an ex-Amazon employee, while his co-founder at Mega Crit, Anthony Giovannetti, worked at Cequint and the now-defunct Ernie’s Games in Woodinville, Wash. Both are graduates from the University of Washington-Bothell who left their jobs in 2015 to begin work on the project that became Slay the Spire.

Since Slay the Spire’s release, CCG-based games like it have become one of the most consistently popular sub-genres in the indie-game scene, with other releases like Deck of Ashes, Monster Train, Griftlands, Throne of Bone, Rogue Lords, and Richard Garfield’s Roguebook following in its path. With a sequel, Mega Crit has a solid chance of continuing to push the envelope on a sub-genre that it more or less helped to define.

No further details about Slay the Spire 2 have been announced at time of writing, but Mega Crit promises that more is to come over the course of the year.

Other Pacific Northwest game news from the the Triple-i Initiative Showcase included:

  • Red Hook Games’ Darkest Dungeon 2, which left Steam Early Access last May, will get a free content update later this year. This adds a new standalone campaign mode, Kingdoms, where players fight several new factions in defense of their turf.
  • Vancouver, B.C.,-based Thorium Entertainment released its debut title, UnderMine, via Fandom in 2019 before moving into self-publishing. The sequel, UnderMine 2, adds 2-player co-op to its dungeon-delving roguelike formula.
  • Bellevue, Wash.-based indie publisher tinyBuild released a new trailer for Streets of Rogue 2, a tongue-in-cheek open-world game about overthrowing a corrupt mayor.
  • tinyBuild also promoted Broken Roads, an RPG set in post-apocalyptic Australia, which released today for PC, Xbox, and PlayStation platforms.

Tech Moves: UiPath CTO lands at Talkdesk; Elastic hires AWS vet; ex-Redfin leaders join LLM startup

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Munil Shah. (Talkdesk Photo)

— Munil Shah, a former engineering leader at UiPath who previously spent 23 years at Microsoft, has joined San Francisco startup Talkdesk as chief technology officer.

Shah, based in Seattle, was most recently a CTO at UiPath, the robotic process automation software giant. He joined UiPath in 2018 after a long stint at Microsoft, where he held various engineering leadership roles.

Founded in 2011, Talkdesk sells software built for customer service contact centers. The company raised a $230 million Series D round in 2021, but has had multiple rounds of layoffs since then.

“There is a massive shift underway in the software industry with the launch of ChatGPT and GenAI, and the contact center is being impacted tremendously,” Shah said in a statement. “This is a pivotal moment for Talkdesk as the market for conversational AI and virtual agents is expected to grow rapidly.”

— Ajay Nair, a longtime engineering leader at Microsoft and Amazon Web Services, joined search technology giant Elastic as a group vice president.

Nair previously spent a decade at AWS, where he led large teams working on various cloud products. Before that, he was a manager at Microsoft, leading Bing teams.

San Francisco-based Elastic went public in 2018. It reported revenue of $328 million, up 19% year-over-year, in its most recent quarter.

Libretto, a LLM startup led by former employees at Seattle real estate giant Redfin, this week came out of stealth and announced a $3.7 million investment round.

Former Redfin CTO Sasha Aickin is CEO of the company, which aims to help customers improve prompt engineering.

The company’s Seattle-based employees include April Alexander, a former director at Redfin who most recently was at Outreach as a head of product; and Mahalie Stackpole, a former lead product designer at Redfin who was also at Outreach.

Jamie DeMichele, who spent more than 17 years at Redfin as an engineering leader, is an engineer at Libretto.

Kareem Choudhry, a longtime Xbox exec, is leaving Microsoft, according to a report from Windows Central. Choudry spent more than 26 years at the Redmond tech giant, leading various video game-related initiatives, including Xbox Cloud Gaming. It’s the latest shakeup at Xbox, The Verge noted.


Top 10 funding deals in Q1 for Pacific Northwest startups

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Data from GeekWire’s funding list.

Startup fundraising activity didn’t budge much in the first quarter of 2024 across the U.S. as the venture capital slowdown continued into the new year.

Quarterly deal value hit the lowest level since 2018, according to the PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor released Thursday.

Higher interest rates and persistent inflation, among other market factors, caused venture capitalists to put the brakes on investing throughout 2023, following record levels of startup fundraising in years prior.

“The venture capital business cycle effectively reset in recent years, and as of early 2024, it still appears to be searching for its level,” NVCA CEO Bobby Franklin wrote in a report.

Funding to tech startups based in Seattle and across the Pacific Northwest in Q1 fell by 30% from the fourth quarter of 2023, and was up slightly year-over-year to more than $433 million in total, according to GeekWire’s funding list.

Many startups are grappling with the shifting fundraising environment.

“Investor expectations and benchmarks have increased for deals, leading to fundamentally strong companies attracting investment, while those unable to achieve the growth and profitability characteristics expected by today’s VCs are struggling to find capital,” PitchBook CEO John Gabbert said in a statement.

But some companies are still raising sizable rounds. We’ve listed the top funding rounds for startups based in the Pacific Northwest below, pulled from our funding list.

ProfoundBio | $112 million

The Seattle-based biotech firm developing drugs to treat ovarian and endometrial cancers raised cash in February. Two months later, it announced a sale to Danish drugmaker Genmab in a $1.8 billion deal.

EigenLayer | $100 million

The “restaking” company behind the EigenLayer project is one of the hottest early stage blockchain startups. Led by founder Sreeram Kannan, a former professor at the University of Washington who led the UW’s Blockchain Lab, EigenLayer raised the round in February from Andreessen Horowitz. 

Pandion | $41.5 million

Founded in 2020 by former Amazon and Walmart executive Scott Ruffin, the Seattle e-commerce startup operates a residential parcel delivery system that covers 80% of U.S. homes and includes five sortation centers. The investment, announced in March, will help Pandion open more sortation centers and expand its geographic reach.

Oleria | $33 million

The Seattle startup emerged from stealth mode last year with software designed to help companies prevent and respond to breaches in an ever-changing cybersecurity landscape. Oleria is led by CEO Jim Alkove, a former chief trust officer at Salesforce.

Interlune | $18 million

The space startup company announced the funding last month when it officially lifted the curtain on its plans to build a robotic harvester that could extract helium-3 from moon dirt and send it back to Earth for applications ranging from quantum computing to fusion power. Interline was co-founded by Rob Meyerson, former president of Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin space venture.

Betadapp | $17 million

The Vancouver, B.C.-based company is developing fraud detection technology for the music industry. It raised the fresh capital in January. Betadapp is led by co-CEOs Andrew Batey, founder of digital marketing firm Hipster Riot, and Morgan Hayduk, a former marketing manager at ZipRecruiter.

Recurrent | $16 million

The Seattle-based startup has established itself as a leader in used EV battery analytics and provides scores for battery health on consumer sites including Edmunds.com and Cars.com. Recurrent announced the funding in January. CEO Scott Case was a former exec at EnergySavvy.

Avante | $10 million

This stealthy Seattle startup announced its seed round in January. The company’s tagline is “empowering a healthier workforce and a healthier bottom line.” Avante CEO Rohan D’Souza is a former chief product officer for healthcare automation company Olive AI.

Symbiosys | $9 million

The two-year-old advertising tech startup is helping retailers sell off-site ads that promote products from brands, that show up in places such as Google search or Instagram. It raised the Series A round in January. CEO and founder Bashar Kachachi is a former advertising leader at Google who also spent more than a decade at Microsoft. 

Digs | $7 million

The 2-year-old company, which announced the round in January, sells a collaboration platform for builders and homeowners that organizes documents, provides communication tools, and generates 3D digital versions of homes, among other features. Digs CEO Ryan Fink previously founded an augmented reality glasses startup called ONtheGo Platforms.

Editor’s note: Seattle-based cybersecurity company ExtraHop raised $100 million in January, but we did not include it in this startup-focused analysis, given that the company was founded 17 years ago and was acquired in a private equity deal in 2021.

Tech Moves: Former DreamBox Learning CEO joins VC firm; First Fed hires Seattle entrepreneur

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Jessie Woolley-Wilson, former CEO of DreamBox Learning. (DreamBox Learning Photo)

— Jessie Woolley-Wilson, former CEO at DreamBox Learning, joined Silicon Valley venture capital firm Owl Ventures as an operating partner.

Woolley-Wilson previously led DreamBox for more than 13 years. Founded in 2006, DreamBox sells education technology software to K-12 schools and was acquired by Discovery Education in 2023. Woolley-Wilson stepped down from day-to-day duties at the company in October.

Owl Ventures is one of the top firms focused on education technology, with more than $2 billion in assets under management. It invested in DreamBox in 2015.

Woolley-Wilson previously held leadership roles with Blackboard’s K–12 Group; LeapFrog SchoolHouse; the College Board; and test-prep company Kaplan. She is on the board of Owl Ventures portfolio companies Quizlet and Class Technologies. 

Level co-founder David Edelstein. (GeekWire File Photo)

— David Edelstein, co-founder of Seattle fintech startup Level, is now chief innovation officer at First Fed, a local community bank based in Washington.

Edelstein wrote on LinkedIn that “we recently exited the business after closing three transactions over the past several months,” including with Found and Giggle Finance. He declined to provide more details about the acquisitions when contacted by GeekWire.

Level, a Techstars Seattle graduate, launched in 2018 and built a credit service targeted at independent contractors.

Edelstein previously was director of the Grameen Technology Center, and spent time at Caribou Digital, Microsoft, and McKinsey.

Kurt Shintaffer, co-founder of Apptio, joined the board of Precanto, a Washington D.C.-based startup developing headcount forecasting software.

Kyle Munson, former marketing leader at Zillow Group and Flyhomes, joined Maryland-based cybersecurity startup Huntress as vice president of demand generation.

— Portland, Ore.-based communications compliance company Smarsh added two board members: Okta exec Sagnik Nandy and former Janney Montgomery Scott exec Tim Scheve.

Cybersecurity startup that helps companies secure industrial systems opens Seattle office

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Inside the attic where Galvanick got its start. From left: Josh Steinman; Brandon Park; and Feliks Pleszczynski. (Galvanick Photo)

Josh Steinman spent four years working as a senior director inside the National Security Council at the White House. One of his biggest takeaways from that experience was the vulnerability of industrial operations that were becoming more digitized — and more susceptible to cyberattacks.

Steinman is now the CEO of Galvanick, a startup that describes itself as an industrial cybersecurity company. Manufacturers in the aerospace and telecom sector are using Galvanick to help monitor their work environments for any potential breaches.

Steinman, a former U.S. Navy officer, founded the company in 2021 with Brandon Park, a former security engineer for industrial control systems at Amazon, and Feliks Pleszczynski, who also worked in the White House and was deputy chief economist for the U.S. Department of Labor.

Galvanick recently opened an office in Seattle, just nearby Amazon’s headquarters. Park is based in Seattle; Steinman and Pleszczynski live in Los Angeles, where the 10-person company has an additional office.

Ransomware attacks against industrial companies were up around 50% last year, according to The Wall Street Journal, citing a report from Dragos.

“We started this company because we knew the threat was going to continue to grow,” Steinman said.

Dragos found an increase in groups targeting “operational technology,” versus information technology (such as accounting or HR software).

Meanwhile, there are geopolitical forces at play. FBI officials have warned of potential Chinese hacking operations that could affect U.S. infrastructure.

“The barriers are getting lower, and the attraction is getting higher,” Steinman noted.

Galvanick’s software analyzes data being used within an industrial operation, and provide alerts to any abnormal activity.

“You can think of us as digital overwatch for big, connected facilities,” Steinman said.

Steinman said there’s a dearth of qualified cybersecurity professionals that specialize in industrial scenarios — which is providing tailwinds for Galvanick.

“We help a very small team cover a very broad area, and protect a lot of infrastructure,” he said.

Even as demand for cybersecurity tools rises, venture capital investment to related startups fell last year, according to TechCrunch.

Galvanick raised a $10 million seed round in June. Its backers include MaC Venture Capital; Founders Fund; Village Global; Countdown Capital; Hanover Technology Investment Management; Shrug Capital; and 8090 Industries.

Steinman said there’s a lot of promise from AI to help combat threats — for example, being able to instantly identify patterns and alert for risk.

But there is little-to-no room for error for many industrial companies, he said, so it may take time before AI tools are fully embraced.

“There’s a really high bar for what is allowed to exist on these types of systems,” he said. “It’s going to be a while until AI gets deployed, just because the scrutiny is incredibly high.”

Former Facebook engineers lead Seattle-based investment firm backing data-focused startups

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Ravi Grover, general partner at Data Tech Fund.

Back when Ravi Grover and his colleagues at Data Tech Fund were getting off the ground a few years ago, not everyone was excited about their focus on data.

“Some of the feedback we got was that it sounded too boring,” Grover said.

But with the recent rush of generative AI and other AI-related technologies, the conversation around data — and the importance of good data to fuel AI apps and services — has changed.

“Now the struggle is the opposite,” said Grover. “How do we set ourselves apart from all the other funds?”

Data Tech Fund, which launched in 2021, is headquartered in Seattle but its four general partners are based across the world. They are all former Facebook engineering leaders who worked at the social media giant more than a decade ago.

  • Grover, based in Seattle, was one of the first employees to work out of Facebook’s offices in Seattle. He later did engineering stints with Seattle startups including Elevator, Poppy, TraceMe, and Mason, and has backed Seattle companies as an angel investor.
  • Siva Kolappa was head of data engineering at Facebook, where he worked from 2008 to 2014. He previously was a data warehouse manager at Netflix from 2002 to 2007.
  • Andreas Quandt was a product analytics manager at Facebook and later joined Edmodo, where he was vice president of product.
  • Stephan Goupille was a growth analytics manager at Facebook and also worked at Uber, Handshake, and Thumbtack.
From left: Andreas Quandt, Stephan Goupille, and Siva Kolappa.

The firm raised $10 million for its first fund and has invested in more than 25 companies. The firm’s investors include leaders at Facebook parent Meta; Apple; Dropbox; Asana; and DocSend.

It focuses on backing companies across various industries that leverage proprietary data and AI.

“We’re looking at whether data has a significant impact on the company, and where we think we may be able to add value,” Grover said.

Being inside of Facebook as it grew exponentially provided the firm’s partners with valuable insights, particularly around “growth data,” Grover said.

“We advise on the underlying data, and also the user growth piece,” he said.

Grover said the firm sees AI as another tool in the broader field of data analytics and data science.

“We’re really focused on real value being created,” he said.

Data Tech Fund hasn’t backed any Seattle-based startups but Grover said he hopes that changes.

“I love the Seattle ecosystem. It’s a good home base,” he said. “But we’re investing everywhere.”

Tech Moves: OpenAI hires former Amazon Web Services leader to lead new Tokyo office

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Tadao Nagasaki. (LinkedIn Photo)

Tadao Nagasaki, a longtime tech exec who led Japan-related operations for Amazon Web Services and F5, is joining OpenAI to head up the company’s new hub in Tokyo, its first office in Asia.

Nagasaki previously spent more than 12 years at AWS. Before that, he held a similar role for Seattle security giant F5 for more than a decade.

“Now is the moment for AI to become the theme of next decades,” Nagasaki wrote on LinkedIn. “Day one again.”

Microsoft-backed OpenAI said it picked Japan as its first Asian office “for its global leadership in technology, culture of service, and a community that embraces innovation.” It also announced that it is releasing a GPT-4 custom model optimized for the Japanese language.

“Our new local presence also gets us closer to leading businesses like Daikin, Rakuten, and TOYOTA Connected who are using ChatGPT Enterprise to automate complex business processes, assist in data analysis, and optimize internal reporting,” OpenAI wrote in a blog post. “ChatGPT also helps accelerate the efforts of local governments, such as Yokosuka City, which is leveraging the technology to improve the efficiency of public services in Japan.”

San Francisco-based OpenAI has additional global offices in Dublin and London.

Japan is the fourth-largest economy in the world. AWS announced last week it was contributing $25 million to a new AI-focused partnership between universities in the U.S. and Japan. The cloud giant also said in January it would invest around $15 billion by 2027 in Japan.

Seattle-area tech giant Microsoft separately announced last week that it is investing $2.9 billion in cloud and AI infrastructure in Japan.

Other key personnel changes across the Pacific Northwest tech ecosystem:

Fixie co-founders, from left: Hessam Bagherinezhad, Matt Welsh, Justin Uberti, Zach Koch. (Fixie Photo)

— Matt Welsh, co-founder and former chief architect at Seattle-based large language model startup Fixie.ai, has departed to work on a new computing platform based on large language models.

His new startup is stealthy and Welsh tells GeekWire he’s not ready to reveal details yet.

“It’s with a mixture of excitement and sadness that I’ve decided to move on from Fixie, which I co-founded in 2022,” Welsh wrote on LinkedIn. “Fixie has pivoted and is now doing some exciting things in the space of real-time conversational AI, but my passions lie elsewhere.”

Before helping launch Fixie, Welsh was an engineering leader at Apple, Google, Xnor.ai, and OctoML.

Fixie raised $17 million last year. At the time, Welsh was the company’s CEO. Another co-founder, Hessam Bagherinezhad, left in September and is now at OpenAI. Co-founders Justin Uberti and Zach Koch remain at Fixie.

Jeff Bogdan, a longtime engineer at Microsoft who joined the company 33 years ago, said he was laid off from the Redmond tech giant. Bogdan was most recently director of learning and development on the Windows team. “After abundant reflection, I have concluded that I am nowhere close to the ‘R word,'” Bogdan wrote on LinkedIn. “There is still so much that I want to contribute. So now begins the journey of finding my second career.”

— Seattle startup Yuzi, which helps support new moms, added veteran tech leader Sarah Daniels as a strategic advisor.

Portland startup goes national with service that finds residential properties for team meetings

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radious
Radious helps companies locate collaborative workspaces in homes or apartments or other residential locations. (Radious Photo)

Radious, the Portland startup that runs a marketplace where residential properties can be used as collaborative workspaces, expanded its reach across the U.S. with a new “national curation service.”

The service, launched earlier this month, helps companies find the right remote work and meeting locations for distributed teams. Radious previously ran its Airbnb-style listings only in Portland, San Francisco and Milwaukee and the new service brings Radious to Seattle and other cities nationwide.

Started during the pandemic in June 2021, Radious has sought to give remote workers a way to get out of the house but still stay in their neighborhoods and avoid commutes to offices or other co-working spaces. The platform also helps hosts earn money by renting their homes, apartments, or other types of properties for the day without worrying about overnight stays.

CEO Amina Moreau launched Radious with co-founders Brian Hendrickson and iLan Epstein. The company participated in the season three finale of GeekWire’s “Elevator Pitch” startup competition.

The curation service was piloted under the radar for about eight months. Radious works with companies to understand their needs for a team offsite or other in-person work, including location, technical requirements, number of people, number of days, etc., and then locates an ideal space for such a gathering — even if such a space is not currently listed on the Radious marketplace.

Radious CEO and co-founder Amina Moreau. (Radious Photo)

Moreau said Radious saw about a 20% increase in bookings as a direct result of the pilot and that revenue more than doubled despite no extra charge for the personalized service. She added that the service has opened up access to “tens of thousands of workspace options” across the country.

“We’ve found that the bigger the need people have, the greater the desire for a personalized experience,” Moreau said via email. “The curation service naturally attracts teams who are already looking for longer, multi-day bookings and/or bigger, more striking workspaces. Put simply, when people are making a bigger commitment, they want to talk to someone and feel taken care of.”

Radious is embracing flexible work solutions as companies and workers are still coming to grips with what types of workplaces and schedules make the most sense post-pandemic.

“Just because your office is open doesn’t mean that you have to mandate a full or even a partial return,” Moreau previously told GeekWire. “You can just open it and say, ‘Come if you want, don’t come if you don’t want.’ And I actually think that the companies that do that are the ones that are going to win in the talent wars.”

In the Seattle region, regional office vacancy rates continue to rise as tech companies stick with hybrid and remote friendly work policies, and the tech downturn that began in 2022 has caused many to trim expenses and lay off workers, reducing the need for office space.

More cities, including Seattle, are also weighing what to do with a glut of vacant office space, including how to convert some commercial real estate to residential use.

Tech Moves: Avalara names president; Microsoft vet launches AI forum; Common Room adds product leader

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Ross Tennenbaum. (Avalara Photo)

— Seattle-based tax software company Avalara named Ross Tennenbaum as its new president.

Tennenbaum joined Avalara in 2019 and became its CFO a year later. He will continue to serve as CFO while taking on more responsibilities overseeing the company’s main business lines and other departments.

Before joining Avalara, Tennenbaum spent time at Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse. He helped Avalara go public in 2018.

Avalara launched in 2004, helping online retailers and others better adhere to complex tax regulations. It sold to a private equity firm Vista Equity Partners in 2022 for $8.4 billion. The company has more than 41,000 customers across 75 countries.

— Stefan Weitz, a longtime tech leader who spent more than 18 years at Microsoft, is leading a new company called HumanX that bills itself as a community and forum for AI.

The company, based in New York City, this week announced a $6 million funding round and its inaugural gathering in March 2025. It plans to host events, provide an advisory service, and launch a nonprofit dedicated to responsible AI regulation.

“The challenge for today’s leaders isn’t more AI inspiration or fear, it’s about evaluating and deploying it in ways that are impactful, responsible and sustainable, ensuring a real return on investment,” Weitz said in a statement. “Our focus is to clear and forge that path, making AI accessible, understandable, and most importantly, practical for every organization.”

After leaving Microsoft in 2016, Weitz joined e-commerce company Radial as an executive vice president. He later launched Jetson, a startup developing probiotics, and was its CEO. Jetson shut down in January.

— Seattle-based business and technology firm Slalom Consulting named Christopher Burger as its first chief information security officer. Burger joined Slalom in 2018 and previously worked for Washington Mutual, Corbis, Clearwire, and Russell Investments.

— Seattle startup Common Room hired marketing vet Drew Spencer Leahy to lead product marketing. He previously worked at Incredible Marketing, PatientNectar, KlientBoost, and HockeyStack. Founded in 2020, Common Room aims to help companies build a better conduit with people in their communities and won Startup of the Year honors at the GeekWire Awards in 2022.

— Seattle-area nonprofit The Russell Family Foundation added two board members: Evlyn Andrade, executive director of EarthCorps, and Rashad Morris, principal and founder of Impact Donor Strategies


Washington Technology Industry Association names Kristen Forecki as new board chair

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Kristen Forecki. (WTIA Photo)

The Washington Technology Industry Association (WTIA) named longtime Seattle tech leader Kristen Forecki as the new chair of its board of directors.

Forecki is currently a senior director of experiences and device strategy at Microsoft. She previously worked at Convoy, Rover, and Amazon in various leadership roles. Forecki earned a Bachelor’s of Business Administration from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an MBA from Harvard Business School.

Forecki was named vice chair of the WTIA board in 2021. She replaces Seattle startup vet Dave Cotter, who was named board chair in 2021 and will remain on the board as chair emeritus. Cotter recently launched his own advisory firm.

The WTIA operates a nonprofit member trade association, a nonprofit tech apprenticeship program, and a for-profit corporation providing business services. It recently was awarded a $300,000 grant from the Washington state Department of Commerce to help boost the region’s technology ecosystem.

Digital ad content generator and testing service Validated raises more cash

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Validated, a Seattle startup that uses AI to help companies figure out what product features and messaging resonates with customers, raised more investment and released a new product.

  • The company this week launched Taglines, which ingests info about a business and generates ads. The product can run the ads and discover which messaging gets more attention. Beauty brands including Sio and Birthdate are using Taglines.
  • Validated recently raised an additional $800,000, after announcing a $1.2 million round in February.
  • The company is led by co-founders Rahul Bhardwaj and Zean Tsoi. Bhardwaj previously worked with Amazon’s Prime Air unit and most recently was a senior mechanical engineer at Meta. Tsoi was previously an engineering manager at Reddit.

In-home health screening startup Reperio raises $14M, inks deal with Uber

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Travis Rush, co-founder and CEO of Reperio Health. (Reperio Photo)

Travis Rush grew up in the tiny seaside town of Gold Beach in Southern Oregon. With a population of only 1,576 — as was proudly proclaimed on the sign coming into town — healthcare resources there were limited. The nearest medical lab was over an hour a way.

Rush is now CEO and co-founder of Reperio Health, a Portland, Ore.-based startup providing in-home health screenings, essentially bringing basic lab services to people in small communities like Gold Beach and in major metros alike.

Reperio recently raised $14 million in new funding to expand its growth and services.

The startup offers kits delivered by mail that include tests for blood pressure and heart rate; a scale and tape measure for determining body mass index; and devices for blood tests that generate instant data for cholesterol, triglycerides, lipids and glucose levels.

An app walks users through the tests and the results are uploaded directly from the devices via a Bluetooth connection.

Users then return the kit by mail. The devices are sterilized for reuse.

Reperio customers receive a kit like this one for performing a set of health tests that provide immediate results at home. (Reperio Health Photo)

“We have people from 18-years old all the way up to 80-years old that have done screenings with our kits because we’ve made it super easy for them to do,” Rush said.

Reperio initially targeted consumers as its customers, but quickly shifted its focus to companies seeking wellness support for employees. The startup is additionally working with hospital networks, providing a solution for patients who don’t have a nearby lab or face challenges visiting a facility, and life-insurance providers. The company is also in conversations with systems supporting Medicaid clients.

Rush said they’ve shipped thousands of kits nationwide and that more than 90% of recipients are completing the screenings.

A single screening costs $129 for consumers, but the costs come down for contracts with employers, healthcare providers and others. Depending on the volume, the price can drop to $75 per use.

Reperio is looking to speed up testing, and has signed an agreement with Uber to deliver a kit to a person’s home within an hour of ordering it. Distribution hubs for the kits will be located in metro areas. More remote customers will still access the kits by mail.

Reperio is also developing a service that will include a consultation with a nurse practitioner as soon as the test is completed in order to facilitate follow-up actions. The visits will incorporate artificial intelligence to analyze the test results and suggest treatment plans the providers may want to recommend. The goal, Rush said, is to remove as many hurdles as possible to getting care.

The company has raised a total of $20 million, and is looking to raise an additional $10 million or more to support this broader mission. It’s also talking to manufacturers of other biometric devices to eventually expand the suite of tests provided. Reperio has 24 employees.

Rush launched the company in 2020 with his co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Matt Wallington. The two worked together at Sightbox, a company that Rush launched in 2015 offering a subscription plan for eye exams and contact lens fittings and supplies. Johnson & Johnson acquired the startup in 2017 for an undisclosed sum.

The latest funding includes investors from the company’s 2021 seed round: Nashville’s Caduceus Capital Partners; Oregon’s Rogue Venture Partners and Portland Seed Fund; and Liquid 2 Ventures in San Francisco. Angel investors also participated in the round.

Other at-home health testing companies competing in the space include Tasso, a Seattle company that offers blood tests for patients in clinical trials, as well as Everlywell, Vida Health, and others.

Seattle tech vet calls rapidly growing ‘AI Tinkerers’ meetups the new ‘Homebrew Computer Club’ for AI

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Attendees at a hackathon presented by AI Tinkerers in Seattle last summer. (Photo courtesy of Joe Heitzeberg)

Seattle tech veteran Joe Heitzeberg remembers seeing a random, AI-related tweet in September 2022.

“Still not enough tinkering happening, for whatever reason,” former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman wrote at the time.

“I’m tinkering!” Heitzeberg thought.

A former co-founder and president of Madrona Venture Labs, Heitzeberg co-founded and led online meat and seafood delivery startup Crowd Cow for nearly eight years. He also led Snapvine and MediaPiston before acquisitions, and he’d been interested in AI long before the current wave of hype around the technology.

AI Tinkerers founder Joe Heitzeberg. (LinkedIn Photo)

The tweet provided the spark Heitzeberg needed to launch a new project, for meeting and collaborating with more people who were actively building with artificial intelligence.

A first meetup in Seattle in November 2022 attracted 12 people. A second in Austin was led by GitHub Copilot creator Alex Graveley, who came up with the name “AI Tinkerers.”

Nearly a year-and-a-half later, Heitzeberg said the idea has taken off and is going global. In a LinkedIn post last week, he said eight cities — from Seattle to Chicago to Boston to Medellin, Colombia, and elsewhere — have AI Tinkerers meetups planned over the next month.

“We are kind of the Homebrew Computer Club of AI,” Heitzeberg said, referencing the famed hobbyist group that gathered in Silicon Valley in the mid-1970s to mid-1980s and attracted the likes of Apple founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. “It was people trying stuff. It’s that for AI, and it’s really needed and really good for innovation.”

AI Tinkerers is intended for seasoned AI professionals who are actively working on AI-powered applications and pushing the boundaries of large language models and generative AI.

‘It’s a meritocracy of creative technologists passionately exploring from the ground up — and some mindblowingly amazing things come from it.’

— Joe Heitzeberg

Nearly 8,000 members have taken part, representing companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, OpenAI, Anthropic and countless stealthy startups. Those attendees work in such roles as AI/ML, full stack engineering, data science and more.

Of more than 650 AI tech demos submitted for consideration, 257 have have been presented at gatherings. The ideas explore themes including AI-powered gaming, healthcare and education; generative AI for creativity; AI-assisted coding; and more.

And it’s not easy to get in.

The waitlist for many AI Tinkerers meetups is often larger than the number of people given the OK to attend. The group stresses that it is for AI builders, not AI enthusiasts. And it’s not for marketers, recruiters or venture capitalists. An FAQ on the group’s website spells out why space is so limited.

“It’s not about general networking,” Heitzeberg said, adding that the meetups have attracted CTO-level attendees from tech giants on down to a University of Washington computer science student who might be hacking an AI project on the side.

Former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, left, and GitHub Copilot creator Alex Gravely sport AI Tinkerers hats with the message “Ignore all previous instructions.” (Photo courtesy of Joe Heitzeberg)

AI Tinkerers is not monetized. The only money — and the only way VCs do get in — comes from sponsors who pick up the tab for a meetup venue and the food and drink.

Heitzeberg built the platform that powers AI Tinkerers, but he calls himself the man behind the curtain in a “Wizard of Oz” sense. He helped set the rules for what it’s all about and how it works, and now managers in the new cities where AI Tinkerers takes root are left to follow the format.

Heitzeberg was leading a startup called Blueprint AI last year, but the venture was short lived as it had to close due to personal family medical reasons. He’s extremely bullish on AI and optimistic about how more powerful software will ultimately make the world a better place.

AI Tinkerers is Heitzeberg’s main focus right now, and he’s found himself advising people and startups that come through the group.

“It’s a pretty amazing forum, if you’re with 120 people, all building experimental stuff or working on their stealth mode startup,” he said. “It’s a meritocracy of creative technologists passionately exploring from the ground up — and some mindblowingly amazing things come from it.”

Atomo opens new roastery in Seattle to produce its beanless coffee for cafes around the U.S.

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Atomo’s new coffee roastery in Seattle. (Atomo Photo)

Atomo, the Seattle-based beanless coffee maker, is marking Earth Day with the grand opening of a new roastery in its hometown that will produce the company’s grounds for coffee shops around the country.

The 33,547 square-foot facility south of downtown Seattle at 1421 S. Dean St. is capable of producing 90 million cups of coffee per year and ushers in another new era for the 5-year-old startup.

“This factory really is a breakthrough for us,” said Atomo co-founder and CEO Andy Kleitsch. “We’re going to satisfy every delivery method of coffee — espresso, drip, ready to drink, and pods.”

Atomo CEO Andy Kleitsch. (Atomo Photo)

Espresso grounds, formulated for professional espresso machines, will be the first product off the line.

“We chose that because that is probably the best customer experience that you can have surrounding coffee — going to a cafe and having a barista make you a beautiful drink,” Kleitsch said. “We really wanted our product to be featured in that way when we first launched.”

Starting in August, Atomo will be partnering with Bluestone Lane, which has 58 coffee shops and cafes around the country. Other independent shops in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Austin will serve Atomo’s espresso. In Seattle, Atomo drinks will be available at Heard Coffee on South Jackson Street.

Atomo also recently landed fresh funding from Japanese brewing and distilling company Suntory.

Atomo first arrived on Seattle’s crowded coffee scene in 2019 as a food-tech startup with a promise to reverse engineer the coffee bean. Its formula has involved removing the bean from the process of making coffee and substituting it with a molecular concoction derived from naturally sustainable, upcycled plant waste ingredients, including extracts of date pits, lemon, guava and sunflower.

Atomo’s espresso blend is designed to have dark chocolate, dried fruit and graham cracker tasting notes. (Atomo Photo)

The company’s goal is to mitigate the effects of climate change on coffee-growing regions around the globe and provide a substitute for the environmentally destructive process of coffee farming. Atomo says its regular espresso generates 83% less carbon emissions and uses 70% less farmland compared to conventional coffee.

Atomo went through a strategic realignment and restructuring last year which resulted in an unspecified number of layoffs. At the time, Atomo was canning different flavors of its “molecular cold brew,” but Kleitsch said a “breakthrough in grounds” created a desire to change focus and ramp production of those grounds in a bigger roastery.

“We started the business to make the world a better place. To do that you have to do it at scale,” Kleitsch said, adding that partnering with established coffee shops and chains is the quickest way to reach more people.

Atomo now employs close to 40 people across a laboratory team, production/operations, and sales/marketing. The startup has raised just over $53 million from backers including S2G Ventures, AgFunder and Horizons Ventures.

After personal experience with cyberstalking, tech founder launches startup battling deepfake content

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Melissa Hutchins, co-founder and CEO of Certifi AI. (Certifi AI Photo)

In January, pornographic deepfake images of Taylor Swift were viewed by millions of people on X and other social media platforms before the sites took action. No one has been identified and prosecuted for using artificial intelligence tools to create the graphic and sometimes violent images of Swift. The response from the tech sector has been limited.

For Melissa Hutchins, the episode was disappointing but not surprising.

Research shows that women and girls are overwhelmingly the victims of this sort of exploitation. But most of the attention on stopping malicious deepfakes is focused on political candidates and issues, Hutchins notes, which while incredibly important, misses the majority of the technology’s victims.

So Hutchins launched Certifi AI, a Seattle startup that is developing technology to identify and hopefully reduce the harm to girls and women who are targeted by deepfake bad actors.

Her motivation is personal.

Five years ago, her roommate’s husband began sending her unwanted, inappropriate text messages. The situation escalated, and Hutchins moved out and received a restraining order. The man’s cyberstalking intensified, and as Hutchins pursued legal action the man widened his attack, sending thousands of messages that threatened violence and murder to people close to Hutchins, as well as law enforcement on the case. The man, a cybersecurity consultant, tried covering his tracks.

“The process for healing is difficult when there’s very few ways to make the activity stop.”

– Melissa Hutchins, Certifi AI CEO and co-founder

Last month, he was convicted of cyberstalking, and awaits sentencing. His crime is punishable by up to five years in prison.

Hutchins said the experience made her feel “powerless.”

“These campaigns of hate and malicious intent — the characters behind these campaigns are usually very committed to their cause and they’re very dedicated to exercising humiliation and exercising power over their victims,” Hutchins said. “The process for healing is difficult when there’s very few ways to make the activity stop.”

The legal recourse for victims is limited. Washington lawmakers this year passed a bill expanding child pornography rules to criminalize the creation, possession and sharing of deepfake images involving minors. At least 10 other states have passed similar measures, according to Crosscut.

Hutchins wants to provide technology that could help address this sort of deepfake abuse. Certifi AI is training a model to identify deepfake images and videos, creating a tool for law enforcement and criminal prosecutions and to help media platforms quickly recognize and remove inappropriate and illegal deepfake content.

Hutchins presenting at a recent pitch event in Seattle for underrepresented founders. (Certifi AI Photo)

Hutchins eventually would like to offer the tool to the girls and women who are being targeted, so they can protect themselves and their identities.

The startup launched in August 2023. Hutchins, who is CEO and co-founder of Certifi AI, has bootstrapped the company and is currently the only full-time employee. Her previous roles include product management at The Disney Company and Expedia.

The other two co-founders are the chief technology officer and lead data architect, both of whom also hold 9-to-5 jobs. Hutchins is working to raise some investment dollars in order to bring them on full time. Certifi AI aims to release an initial product later this year.

There are other organizations working in the deepfake space, including Seattle-based nonprofit TrueMedia, an effort focused on political disinformation led by Oren Etzioni, a University of Washington professor and former CEO of the Allen Institute for AI. Hutchins has spoken with Etzioni and is eager to collaborate with others in the field where it makes sense.

Hutchins said her personal experience with the issue provides her with valuable, unique insights into the problem. She wants to see more women leading and founding efforts in this area given they’re the main targets of the attacks.

“Other CEOs and competitors in this space, they’re never going to be able to know what it feels like to not only be a woman in this type of problem space,” Hutchins said, “[or] having gone through the system of trying to get legal protection, and knowing all of the different hoops that you have to go through.”

Outpost, which manages semi-truck parking facilities, raises $12.5M

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(Outpost Photo)

Outpost, an Austin, Texas-based trucking parking facility operator that has an engineering center in Seattle, announced a $12.5 million Series A investment round.

The company was founded two years ago under the name Semi-Stow. It operates 18 properties and 8,000 parking spaces, and also runs a brokerage business to help trucking companies find secure parking.

Outpost’s software platform lets trucking companies book and manage reservations online; manage driver access to facilities; monitor equipment via video feeds; and get detailed reports on usage.

GreenPoint Partners led the Series A round.

“Real estate has traditionally been an operational constraint and capital liability for trucking companies — Outpost is turning it into a competitive advantage and a degree of freedom,” Chris Green, founder and CEO of GreenPoint, said in a statement.

Outpost has about 10 employees working in Seattle on product and engineering functions at an office in the Fremont neighborhood. The company is led by CEO Trent Cameron, who previously worked at Salesforce, Workrise, and Spiceworks.


Zillow and Grubhub vets launch new Seattle-based advisory firm to help growth companies

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Scala Advisors co-founders Chad Cohen (left) and Ryan Domyancic. (Scala Photos)

Longtime technology industry leaders Chad Cohen and Ryan Domyancic unveiled Scala Advisors, their new Seattle-based advisory firm designed to help growth-stage companies in the public and private markets.

Cohen is the former CFO at Zillow Group and Adaptive Biotechnologies; he led IPOs for both Seattle tech giants. Most recently he was CFO and COO at Earth observation data startup Capella Space.

Domyancic got started in investment banking, joined William Blair as an equity research analyst, then did investor relations stints with Grubhub and Vacasa.

Scala means “scale” in Latin — and it’s what the firm hopes to provide clients, using the expertise in finance and operations that Cohen and Domyancic bring to the table.

Services offered range from operational and capital planning, to public company readiness advice, to mentorship and coaching for execs.

“I’m thrilled to be able to continue the work I’ve done as a CFO and board member but now as a trusted advisor and partner to companies across sectors who aim to make a difference in the world,” Cohen wrote on LinkedIn.

FTC bans all new non-compete clauses and strikes down most existing agreements

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Arisa Chattasa Photo via Unsplash.

Goodbye, non-competes.

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission today released its final rules addressing non-compete clauses by banning all future agreements.

Non-competes have traditionally restricted workers from taking jobs with a competitor or starting a competing business. The employment clauses — which are applied to wide-ranging businesses — have been particularly contentious and polarizing in the technology sector.

The FTC and others portray the clauses as stifling innovation and harming workers while some argue the agreements are necessary protections for intellectual property and trade secrets.

“Non-compete clauses keep wages low, suppress new ideas, and rob the American economy of dynamism, including from the more than 8,500 new startups that would be created a year once non-competes are banned,” said FTC Chair Lina Khan, in a statement.

The FTC proposed the rule change in January 2023. The commission received 26,000 public comments on the plan, the vast majority in favor of a ban.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, an advocate for free enterprise, vowed to sue the FTC over the regulation.

“This decision sets a dangerous precedent for government micromanagement of business and can harm employers, workers and our economy,” said the organization’s president and CEO Suzanne Clark in a statement.

The rule also strikes down existing non-competes — except for senior executives, who comprise less than 1% of the workforce, according to the FTC.

In the case of top leadership, the clauses “remain in force because this subset of workers is less likely to be subject to the kind of acute, ongoing harms currently being suffered by other workers subject to existing non-competes and because commenters raised credible concerns about the practical impacts of extinguishing existing non-competes for senior executives,” states the rules.

But going forward, no new non-competes will be permitted for senior executives.

The FTC estimates non-compete clauses cover roughly one-in-five American employees, or about 30 million workers.

The commission predicts that employees on average will earn an additional $524 per year thanks to the new rules.

In 2019, Washington state approved its own limits on non-compete agreements, making them allowable only for employees earning more than $100,000 a year and independent contractors who made $250,000 annually. The state law also capped the clauses at 18 months.

The final rule from the FTC takes effect 120 days after it’s published in the Federal Register and supersedes the state law.

In June 2022, Microsoft announced that it would no longer include non-compete clauses in its U.S. employment agreements, and would remove the clauses from existing agreements. The change applied to all employees except senior leaders of the Redmond, Wash.-based tech giant.

“Microsoft believes that American innovation thrives when people have the freedom to pursue the career path they feel best aligns with their passion and skills,” Microsoft President Brad Smith said in a statement Tuesday.

Seattle-based Amazon has sued multiple former workers over the past decade for alleged non-compete violations. We’ve reached out to the company for comment, and will update if we hear back.

Editor’s note: Updated to add response from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

98point6 hit by new layoffs in latest change at health tech startup

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(98point6 Photo)

Seattle-based digital healthcare startup 98point6 has conducted a new round of layoffs, the company confirmed Tuesday.

98point6 did not provide details on the number of employees affected.

A number of posts from affected workers began showing up on LinkedIn last week. One affected employee told GeekWire that a majority of staff was let go. Another worker who joined the company more than six years ago called her layoff an “unplanned departure.”

The company has around 100 employees in the U.S., according to LinkedIn.

In a statement to GeekWire, 98point6 called the workforce reduction “part of a larger action at the company” and said a number of employees transitioned to Transcarent as part of its partnership with the San Francisco-based startup. 98point6 said it will continue to have an appropriate level of staffing as it continues to license its software to other healthcare organizations.

The layoffs follow a tumultuous past several years for 98point6, founded in 2015 as a virtual primary care provider. The company saw huge growth during the pandemic and raised a $118 million Series E round in late 2020.

But then the startup went through an abrupt leadership change in 2021 when co-founder and CEO Robbie Cape was pushed out by the board.

In July 2022, the company laid off 10% of its workforce, saying that the cuts were made “to align with the future needs of the business.”

In March of last year, 98point6 announced that it was selling its virtual care platform and primary care business to Transcarent for $100 million in cash and equity. 98point6 relaunched as a software-only company focused on licensing its tech to third-party healthcare providers.

A month later, in April 2023, 98point6 raised $30 million to support its transition to the new business model. The investment was intended to help the startup scale the software business and develop new innovations such as data modeling and artificial intelligence.

In January, the company acquired the remaining assets of Bright.md, a Portland-based asynchronous telehealth provider.

98point6 currently has no open positions on its jobs board.

Cape, a Seattle tech veteran, founded the company alongside Gordon Cohen, a professor at the University of Arizona, and Jeff Greenstein, a longtime Seattle business leader and philanthropist who is chairman of 98point6. Greenstein became CEO after Cape’s departure. The company is currently led by CEO Jay Burrell.

The tech downturn in 2022 led to widespread layoffs that continued throughout last year, when more than 250,000 tech workers lost their jobs.

The pace of layoffs has slowed but companies are still shedding jobs in 2024, with more than 74,000 jobs cut at more than 250 organizations, according to Layoffs.fyi.

98point6 is currently in the No. 46 spot on the GeekWire 200 ranked index of Pacific Northwest startups. The company won the GeekWire Award for Health Innovation of the Year in 2019. It has raised nearly $300 million.

Former Amazon Prime Air employees raise $4.5M for stealthy solar airplane startup

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Radical’s co-founders, CTO Cyriel Notteboom and CEO James Thomas, carry a solar-powered demonstrator aircraft that flew continuously for more than 24 hours during a test flight last year. (Radical Photo).

Seattle-based Radical says it has raised $4.5 million to support the development of solar-powered, autonomous airplanes that can beam down connectivity and imagery during long-duration, high-altitude flights.

The seed funding round was led by Scout Ventures, with additional funding from other investors including Inflection Mercury Fund and Y Combinator. According to Pitchbook, Radical previously received $500,000 in pre-seed funding from Y Combinator.

Radical’s co-founders are CEO James Thomas and chief technology officer Cyriel Notteboom. Both founders are veterans of Prime Air, Amazon’s effort to field a fleet of delivery drones. They left Amazon in mid-2022 to found Radical — and the aerospace startup is just now coming out of stealth.

Thomas told GeekWire that Radical will use the newly announced investment to expand its team, which currently amounts to four people.

“We’re still a small team, but we’re growing very quickly,” he said.

Thomas said Radical’s mission is to develop autonomous, solar-powered, propeller-driven aircraft that can fly continuously in the stratosphere without landing. The lightweight aircraft could carry payloads for a wide range of applications including imaging, remote sensing and telecommunications.

“You could really think about what we’re developing as a technology for persistent airborne infrastructure,” he said. “The possibilities that this opens up are really enormous, and we’re excited about what that means. … Ultimately, a yearlong flight is definitely a possibility.”

Last October, Thomas and Notteboom flew an ultralight 13-pound prototype with a wingspan of 20 feet for more than 24 hours nonstop, at a site near Seattle. “It wasn’t too far from here,” Thomas said. “It was out in the mountains. We can’t talk too much about this.”

Thomas said the test flight was an important milestone. “Integrating the solar cells, having that battery endurance, autonomous flight — all these key aspects of our system, we’re proving them at subscale,” he said. “We like to be hands-on and hardware-rich with our development, and then iterate toward a solution. So we’re getting out there, proving the systems, and now moving on to full scale.”

The added funding should accelerate the drive toward building and testing that full-scale aircraft, with a projected wingspan in the range of 110 feet and the ability to fly as high as 70,000 feet. “We’re 100% focused on that now,” Thomas said. “In the next 12 months, we’ll be flying.”

The plane is already taking shape at Radical’s home base in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, Thomas said. “We’re building things right now, like big wing sections, and iterating from that. You know, better design, better prototyping. There’s lots of interesting development going on,” he said. “Seattle’s a great area to be building a company like this.”

Thomas said long-duration flights in the stratosphere could offer a “lot of opportunity” for commercial or government applications. Among the possibilities: continuous real-time monitoring of weather systems, wildfires or illegal fishing; high-resolution imaging and mapping; mobile cellular service and broadband direct-to-device internet access. The fact that the solar-powered flights involve zero carbon emissions is an added benefit.

Radical’s vision has similarities to the flight concept that Facebook pursued in a project that was known as Aquila. Facebook’s high-altitude, solar-powered drones were intended to serve as relay stations for internet access to remote areas. Flight tests were conducted in 2016 and 2017, but internal development of the aircraft ended in 2018, amid reports of formidable technical challenges.

Thomas said he and his teammates have learned from previous work on the frontiers of autonomous flight. Thomas spent five years as a research scientist at Amazon Prime Air, and Notteboom has nine years of experience as a hardware development engineer on Amazon’s drone development team. Lucas Campbell, a mechanical engineer who joined the Radical team in January, lists four years of experience at Amazon — plus internships at SpaceX and Zipline.

“I think the team is key,” Thomas said. “We have a really good team at Radical, bringing experience from programs like Amazon. What we learned there is really important, and how we apply that now to continue to address our customers’ needs is what we’re focused on.”

Good riddance? Critics of non-competes say tech companies may ultimately benefit from FTC ban

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Amazon has gone to court several times in the past to enforce non-compete agreements with departing employees in Washington state, home of its Seattle-area headquarters. (GeekWire File Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

Like it or not, the Federal Trade Commission’s ban on non-competition agreements could force a change in mindset inside the companies that use them — ultimately improving their ability to hire and retain talented employees.

That’s one take from critics of non-compete deals after the FTC announced a new rule Tuesday that prohibits companies from using the clauses in new employment contracts, and invalidates many existing agreements.

Companies will need to keep employees “by giving them the best jobs, and helping them realize their personal aspirations, as well as helping the company realize its aspirations,” said Brian Hall, a longtime tech marketing exec in Seattle. “That’s an alignment of interests that has proven to be quite successful at a lot of places.”

Brian Hall

Hall has first-hand experience with the issue. He was sued by Amazon in 2020 after taking a job with Google Cloud in alleged violation of the non-compete clause in his Amazon employment agreement.

It was one of numerous examples of Amazon and others suing departing employees, although it was unusual in that Hall is not an engineer — standing out at the time as an example of selective enforcement of non-compete clauses.

Non-compete clauses were long ago rendered virtually unenforceable in California, but they have persisted in various forms at some companies in Washington state even as they have fallen out of favor in recent years.

Microsoft, which brought attention to the issue when it sued AI pioneer Kai-Fu Lee after he left for Google in 2005, more recently has pulled back on its use of non-compete agreements.

The Redmond company said in 2022 that it would no longer include non-competes in its U.S. employment agreements, and would remove the clauses from existing agreements, with the exception of senior leaders.

Washington state set limits on non-compete agreements in 2019, capping them at 18 months and allowing them only for employees earning more than $100,000 a year and independent contractors who made $250,000 annually.

Amazon has filed numerous non-compete lawsuits against departing employees over the years, although it appears to have become less litigious on this issue more recently. The company in 2015 removed non-compete clauses from warehouse worker employment contracts. Amazon declined to comment on the FTC’s new rule.

Rule excludes existing non-competes for senior execs

The final rule, issued Tuesday, declared it an unfair method of competition to enter into, enforce, or attempt to enforce non-compete clauses. This applies to new contracts, after the rule’s effective date. Existing non-compete agreements with most workers will also become unenforceable after the rule takes effect.

One exception: Existing non-competes with senior executives are allowed to remain in effect. “Senior executive” is defined as those earning more than $151,164 who are in a “policy-making position,” according to the final rule. The FTC estimates that this represents a small fraction of workers, less than 1 percent.

“A high percentage of the labor market at publicly traded tech companies make more than the stated range here in Seattle.”

Albert Squiers, Fuel Talent

This is one aspect of the decision that caught the attention of the Albert Squiers, managing director of the technology practice at Fuel Talent in Seattle.

“A high percentage of the labor market at publicly traded tech companies make more than the stated range here in Seattle,” he pointed out. As a result, he said, the definition of “policy-making position” will be a crucial issue.

The FTC’s final rule defines “policy-making position,” in part, as “a business entity’s president, chief executive officer or the equivalent, any other officer of a business entity who has policy-making authority, or any other natural person who has policy-making authority for the business entity similar to an officer with policy-making authority.”

Squiers said, “I’m very curious to see what the courts will have to say about this as it’s a fairly broad framework.”   

To that end, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has vowed to challenge the FTC decision in court.

“The Federal Trade Commission’s decision to ban employer noncompete agreements across the economy is not only unlawful but also a blatant power grab that will undermine American businesses’ ability to remain competitive,” the U.S. Chamber said in a statement, adding that the FTC ruling “sets a dangerous precedent for government micromanagement of business.”

In the meantime, the FTC’s final rule does not mandate that employers formally rescind existing noncompete agreements, as was initially proposed in the draft rule, but instead requires companies to provide notice to employees that the noncompete agreement won’t be enforced against them in the future.

“Will that create a rush of innovation and new companies, or will it simply create a heavy burden of emails and HR questions for employers?” asked Squiers, of Fuel Talent. “How will this impact company culture?”

FTC Chair Lina Khan. (FTC Photo)

In a statement accompanying the new rule, FTC Chair Lina Khan said more than 8,500 new startups would be created annually once noncompetes are banned. She added, “The FTC’s final rule to ban noncompetes will ensure Americans have the freedom to pursue a new job, start a new business, or bring a new idea to market.”

In his experience of more than 15 years working with startups, Squiers said he hasn’t found non-competes to be a significant hurdle for employees and executives who want to leave to start their own companies.

“The largest factor is the often times significant financial risk the potential founder will incur, followed by the difficulty in securing investments/funding, and a distant third being non-competes,” he said.

But in the long run, Squiers said he believes the FTC’s ban on non-competes “will drive confidence in exploring other options without the worry of expensive legal implications especially as the market has started to rebound.”

Non-competes, NDAs, and intellectual property

The FTC’s rule could have additional implications for legislation and litigation over the protection of intellectual property, said Michael Schutzler, the CEO of the Washington Technology Industry Association.

IP protection is often a key consideration for companies when employees with inside knowledge leave for new jobs.

“We have always agreed that most non-competes do more harm than good,” Schutzler said. “We’ve also spoken and written at length about how IP laws are insufficient for certain roles and situations.”

He added, “I would be willing to speculate that if non-compete laws are fully banned in the US, then we can expect to see far more IP litigation and far more lobbying for stronger IP protections.”

Hall, who ultimately reached a confidential settlement in Amazon’s suit, said this week that he believes non-disclosure agreements, or NDAs, are a more direct and effective means of protecting corporate interests — preventing a departing employee from divulging confidential information without impacting their ability to take another job.

As someone who grew up in Seattle, Hall is rooting for the tech community here, and said he believes the FTC’s rule will be a positive step for the region’s innovation economy.

“It will basically get Washington state to be more modern relative to the place that has the most vibrant market, which is California right now,” he said. “I think we’ve got a ton on California. And I’d love to see us be the No. 1 place for technology and software development, including AI.”

Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal, founders of podcast ‘Acquired,’ are raising an investment fund

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David Rosenthal (left) and Ben Gilbert, co-hosts of the Acquired podcast. (Acquired Photo)

The hosts of the popular business and technology podcast Acquired are raising a new fund to invest in growth-stage tech companies.

GeekWire spotted a new SEC filing today that revealed the fund.

Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal, the longtime techies and hosts of Acquired, already do personal investing in companies they know from their work on the podcast. Now they’re creating a more formal mechanism to do so.

“The fund is just a vehicle with a small set of LPs that lets us fully utilize those allocations when they’re offered to us,” Gilbert told GeekWire via email Wednesday.

Gilbert and Rosenthal are no strangers to the venture capital world. They worked together at Madrona Venture Group in Seattle before launching Acquired as a side hobby in 2015.

The show has grown into one of the world’s leading technology and business podcasts, doubling its listener base each year since inception. It now attracts more than 600,000 monthly listeners and is currently among the top five tech shows on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

“We’re being very intentional right now not to build a new venture capital ‘firm’ per-se, so we can stay focused on making the best Acquired episodes we can,” Gilbert said.

Gilbert and Rosenthal have invested in startups that they became familiar with through Acquired, including Vanta, Modern Treasury, and Go1.

“We’re fortunate that the podcast often gives us unique access to participate in investment rounds as these companies scale,” Gilbert said.

Acquired tells in-depth stories and strategies of companies, with episodes typically three to four hours in length. The latest episode, a deep dive on Microsoft, came out this week, with Gilbert calling it the “Super Bowl of Acquired.”

Other popular episodes analyze companies such as Nike, Costco, and LVMH. Guests on the show have included NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, and the late Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway.

Acquired generates revenue from sponsors and subscribers.

Gilbert recently transitioned to a new role at Pioneer Square Labs, the Seattle startup studio he helped launch in 2015, to focus more time on Acquired. Rosenthal is still an investor at San Francisco-based Kindergarten Ventures.





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