Defending Russia’s EU neighbors

abstract render of defense tech

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday.

This week we’re looking at an AI startup that wants to help people get creative with video; Kudos, which raised $3 million to help get rid of diaper rash; and VCs backing other VCs.

Most interesting startup stories from the week

Man at laptop in a defense bunker
Image Credits: Helsing

Investors keep pouring dollars and euros into startups that can help protect the world from aggressive nations. Helsing, a defense startup that uses AI to improve battlefield decisions, has raised €450 million ($487 million). Some of that money will go toward a new entity in Estonia to protect the Baltic states from its dangerous neighbor, Russia. According to Bloomberg’s sources, Helsing’s valuation jumped from $1.85 billion last year to $5.4 billion. Meanwhile, some U.S. venture funds with defense tech strategies are arming themselves with new types of investors: veterans and ex-Department of Defense officials.  

Speaking of soaring valuations, the latest numbers from PitchBook data show that startup prices have hit an all-time high in 2024. Is it time to rejoice about the end of the downturn? Not so fast. Turns out that prices are up only for the best companies. Everyone else is still struggling to raise capital or is finding a way to obfuscate poor valuations.

Turning AI foe into friend: While Hollywood artists may be nervous about AI tech stealing their livelihoods, DreamFlare, a startup founded by a document filmmaker and an ex-Googler, wants creators to make more content and a nice income with AI. The studio will help animation artists work alongside an experienced creative team on story development and then will distribute the videos through its online platform.

Draw your anxiety away: Fears of war and the possibility of AI replacing people’s jobs are only adding to the existing mental health crisis. Scribble Journey created an app that helps users explore their emotions through art therapy.  

Most interesting fundraises this week

Alma co-founders, from left, Shuo Chen, Aizada Marat, and Assel Tuleubayeva
Image Credits: Alma / Alma co-founders, from left, Shuo Chen, Assel Tuleubayeva, and Aizada Marat

The U.S. is short on tech and other high-skilled professionals. Importing that talent from abroad is one of the answers. But getting a work visa approved by the U.S. Department of State may not be just a function of limited slots. Immigration lawyers sometimes give wrong advice to individuals looking to work in the country. The Kyrgyzstan-born, Harvard-educated Aizada Marat founded Alma, an AI-powered legal tech startup that speeds up and simplifies the visa obtainment process for technologists, founders and researchers.

Sending money abroad: Nala, an African payments startup, raised a $40 million Series A round led by Acrew Capital. The huge round shows that international remittances could be a huge business.

Data-powered diagnoses: Busy doctors don’t always have time to review every data point in a patient’s chart, occasionally leading to missed diagnoses. Regard, a startup that just raised $61 million at a $350 million valuation, does this for physicians with the help of AI.

Bye-bye, diaper rash: Baby not sleeping well? He or she may hate the feeling of plastic on the bends of their diaper. Give Kudos, a startup that lines its diapers with 100% cotton and raised $3 million, a try.

Most interesting fund news this week 

Image Credits: Index Ventures

Index Ventures restocks: Brand name funds seem to have no problem raising huge funds these days. Index Ventures announced $2.3 billion in fresh capital. The firm’s fundraise is slightly smaller than its previous vintage, but Index says it’s an appropriate amount for the current market.

Look to the stars: German-based Alpine Space Ventures has raised a $184 million (€170 million) fund to invest in companies serving the space industry in the U.S. and Europe.

VCs backing VCs: Kearny Jackson raised a $65 million third fund from pre-seed and seed B2B SaaS and fintech infrastructure startups. The firm’s LPs include Sequoia, Bain Capital Ventures, Menlo Ventures and Marc Andreessen. 

Last but not least

Arianna Huffington teamed up with Sam Altman on a new health coaching startup, Thrive AI Health. The company is backed by Huffington’s wellness company Thrive and the OpenAI Startup Fund. The startup will offer an AI-powered assistant that nudges people to lead a healthier lifestyle. The question is, of course, will it be as successful as a human coach in getting individuals to exercise and eat their vegetables? Another question is how much funding Thrive AI Health received to develop its capabilities.

Defending Russia’s EU neighbors

abstract render of defense tech

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday.

This week we’re looking at an AI startup that wants to help people get creative with video; Kudos, which raised $3 million to help get rid of diaper rash; and VCs backing other VCs.

Most interesting startup stories from the week

Man at laptop in a defense bunker
Image Credits: Helsing

Investors keep pouring dollars and euros into startups that can help protect the world from aggressive nations. Helsing, a defense startup that uses AI to improve battlefield decisions, has raised €450 million ($487 million). Some of that money will go toward a new entity in Estonia to protect the Baltic states from its dangerous neighbor, Russia. According to Bloomberg’s sources, Helsing’s valuation jumped from $1.85 billion last year to $5.4 billion. Meanwhile, some U.S. venture funds with defense tech strategies are arming themselves with new types of investors: veterans and ex-Department of Defense officials.  

Speaking of soaring valuations, the latest numbers from PitchBook data show that startup prices have hit an all-time high in 2024. Is it time to rejoice about the end of the downturn? Not so fast. Turns out that prices are up only for the best companies. Everyone else is still struggling to raise capital or is finding a way to obfuscate poor valuations.

Turning AI foe into friend: While Hollywood artists may be nervous about AI tech stealing their livelihoods, DreamFlare, a startup founded by a document filmmaker and an ex-Googler, wants creators to make more content and a nice income with AI. The studio will help animation artists work alongside an experienced creative team on story development and then will distribute the videos through its online platform.

Draw your anxiety away: Fears of war and the possibility of AI replacing people’s jobs are only adding to the existing mental health crisis. Scribble Journey created an app that helps users explore their emotions through art therapy.  

Most interesting fundraises this week

Alma co-founders, from left, Shuo Chen, Aizada Marat, and Assel Tuleubayeva
Image Credits: Alma / Alma co-founders, from left, Shuo Chen, Assel Tuleubayeva, and Aizada Marat

The U.S. is short on tech and other high-skilled professionals. Importing that talent from abroad is one of the answers. But getting a work visa approved by the U.S. Department of State may not be just a function of limited slots. Immigration lawyers sometimes give wrong advice to individuals looking to work in the country. The Kyrgyzstan-born, Harvard-educated Aizada Marat founded Alma, an AI-powered legal tech startup that speeds up and simplifies the visa obtainment process for technologists, founders and researchers.

Sending money abroad: Nala, an African payments startup, raised a $40 million Series A round led by Acrew Capital. The huge round shows that international remittances could be a huge business.

Data-powered diagnoses: Busy doctors don’t always have time to review every data point in a patient’s chart, occasionally leading to missed diagnoses. Regard, a startup that just raised $61 million at a $350 million valuation, does this for physicians with the help of AI.

Bye-bye, diaper rash: Baby not sleeping well? He or she may hate the feeling of plastic on the bends of their diaper. Give Kudos, a startup that lines its diapers with 100% cotton and raised $3 million, a try.

Most interesting fund news this week 

Image Credits: Index Ventures

Index Ventures restocks: Brand name funds seem to have no problem raising huge funds these days. Index Ventures announced $2.3 billion in fresh capital. The firm’s fundraise is slightly smaller than its previous vintage, but Index says it’s an appropriate amount for the current market.

Look to the stars: German-based Alpine Space Ventures has raised a $184 million (€170 million) fund to invest in companies serving the space industry in the U.S. and Europe.

VCs backing VCs: Kearny Jackson raised a $65 million third fund from pre-seed and seed B2B SaaS and fintech infrastructure startups. The firm’s LPs include Sequoia, Bain Capital Ventures, Menlo Ventures and Marc Andreessen. 

Last but not least

Arianna Huffington teamed up with Sam Altman on a new health coaching startup, Thrive AI Health. The company is backed by Huffington’s wellness company Thrive and the OpenAI Startup Fund. The startup will offer an AI-powered assistant that nudges people to lead a healthier lifestyle. The question is, of course, will it be as successful as a human coach in getting individuals to exercise and eat their vegetables? Another question is how much funding Thrive AI Health received to develop its capabilities.

National flag of Ukraine

Two years since Russia's invasion, Ukraine's startups soldier on

National flag of Ukraine

Image Credits: Toshe_O (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

This weekend marks exactly two years since Russia’s illegal, unprovoked and brutal invasion of Ukraine. Despite overwhelming odds and continued hiccups in the supplies of Western aid to fight off Russia’s onslaught, and the trail of destruction resulting from the fighting, the country and its tech startup ecosystem have soldiered on, becoming a case study in resilience.

Of the 511 tech companies based in Kharkiv before February 2022 — these days a city better known for coming under regular Russian bombardment — 500 are still operating, according to the organization overseeing Kharkiv’s tech cluster.

Tech companies in the West have rallied around the sector, increasingly working with Ukrainian tech firms on a range of initiatives.

This week, Google launched its second “Google for Startups Ukraine Support Fund” with a budget of $10 million to support Ukrainian startups during 2024 and 2025. Selected Ukrainian startups will receive up to $200,000 in equity-free funding, as well as Google mentorship, product support and $300,000 in Google Cloud credits. Since the war started, Google claims to have allocated more than $45 million in direct aid and $7 million to support humanitarian efforts.

Since the war broke out, the scheme has provided 58 startups with $5 million in non-equity grants and $15.8 million in follow-on funding. Tech companies supported in this way have included Skyworker.ai, Mindly and Zeely. Zeely raised a $1 million seed round last year.

Meanwhile, Estonian accelerator Startup Wise Guys launched Growth Ukraine, a program for startups in Ukraine.

And the EU-funded “Seeds of Bravery” project has launched five programs to support Ukrainian tech startups, with grants ranging from €10,000 to €50,000.

Last week, the nonprofit startup support program UK-Ukraine TechExchange launched, specializing in defense tech and agtech.

The private pro-bono program mainly works with startups developing drones, UAVs sound-based missile detection, counter-drone technology and drones for agricultural applications.

Ukraine’s tech sector is astoundingly resilient, and even growing.

A recent survey from the Lviv IT Cluster (“Adaptability and Resilience Amidst War”) — which it said is based on interviews with 7,000 tech specialists and more than 400 companies — found that while a substantial number of technology specialists have fled the country, the majority remain, including Ukrainians studying and entering the workforce at home and abroad.

The total number of tech specialists, it said, has increased by more than 7%, to 307,600 people. Some 242,000 of these continue to live and work in Ukraine. The number of Ukrainian tech people dispersing internationally is up to 65,000 from 55,000-57,000 a year ago, a rise of 20%.

Those workers, and Ukraine’s tech sector, have contributed to keeping the country’s economy afloat amid the war.

The tech industry contributed 4.9% (or $7.1 billion) to Ukraine’s GDP last year. In Emerging Europe’s IT Competitiveness Index, published in April last year, Ukraine took 12th place, rising from 14th in 2022.

Poland, unsurprisingly considering its shared border, has quickly become the top country for those fleeing the country. Some 36% of Ukrainian CEOs plan to open new offices, 28% of them abroad, with the majority choosing Poland as their second base of operation.

Ukraine is also exporting the technology behind its rapidly developing digital government. mRiik, Estonia’s latest digital tool, has been based on Ukraine’s Minister of Digital Transformation Diia app, which securely stores ID cards, passports and driving licenses digitally, as well as allows access to some public services.

The same Ministry of Digital Transformation also runs the Ukrainian Startup Fund, which has become the country’s largest angel investor, backing over 350 startups. Many of these startups, responding to the climate in which they are working and getting funded, have pivoted toward defense and dual-use applications.

To fuel that ecosystem further, in Spring 2023, the country launched a defense tech initiative called BRAVE1. This fast-tracks innovation in the defense and security sectors. According to the organisation, during the ten months of the existence of the Brave1 cluster, more than 1,200 developments were registered on the platform, half of which passed the military expertise and received BRV1 status. Also, Brave1 issued 168 grants for a total amount of $2,920,000, it says.

More mature Ukrainian startups, and startups headed by Ukrainian founders, have not stood still, either:

Preply raised a further $70 million in funding last year — a combination of debt and equity — to extend its Series C to $120 million. It now has 650 employees and 40,000 language tutors. It claims to have increased revenue by 10-fold since 2021, and recently set up a new office in New York City. It is providing free group language lessons to displaced Ukrainians, and charges no commission fees to any tutors based in Ukraine and more.Ukrainian software company MacPaw is in the final stages of developing a beta version of an app store for iOS apps, aimed at EU-based iPhone users.At the end of 2023, Firefly Aerospace closed another tranche of financing, valuing the company at $1.5 billion pre-money, it claims. It says it’s raised $300 million in funding since February 2023.Carmoola, a British fintech for car financing co-founded by Ukrainians Roman Sumnikov and Ihor Hordiychuk, secured $125 million in funding in February 2023, followed by an additional $16 million in January 2024. It’s backed by VCs including VentureFriends, InMotion Ventures and u.ventures.Fintech Farm, a digital banking solution pioneer founded by Ukrainians, raised $22 million to venture into emerging markets.DressX, a digital fashion retailer initiated by Ukrainians Darya Shapovalova and Natalia Modenova, secured $15 million to expand its AR and digital clothing offerings.Vidby, which has AI-based voice translation solutions, with an R&D center in Ukraine (and a Ukrainian CEO and co-founder).NewHomesMate, a marketplace of new construction homes in the U.S., has raised $5.5 million in funding.ELVTR, an education startup with Ukrainian founders and team, retains 45% of its staff in Ukraine.Geek VC is a $23-million VC fund which invests in Ukrainian immigrant founders. The fund was created by Ihar Mahaniok in partnership with Ukrainian Vadim Rogovskiy. Twenty-five percent of their portfolio companies are run by Ukrainian founders.Hypra Fund launched shortly after the invasion of Ukraine. The fund has allocated nearly $20 million toward companies with Ukrainian heritage, including a $10 million in Trinetix.Spend With Ukraine is a nonprofit that curates a web platform with more than 240 Ukrainian-rooted brands. By choosing to  #spendwithUkraine, consumers worldwide can stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine.Respeecher is an AI tool for voice replication technology that works with Hollywood movie studios. Because the Crimean Tatar language is deemed critically endangered by UNESCO, Respeecher’s team gathers the voices of Crimean Tatar speakers to safeguard a language threatened during Russia’s occupation.Petcube, a company that develops interactive pet cameras, launched Cam 360 and a GPS Tracker for pets.Everyrun is a Ukrainian-British social running platform offering solutions for marathon organizers, charities and corporations aiming to host running events. In the last year it launched its product, the company has formed partnerships with marathon organizers in Lithuania and Italy, and attracted runners from 32 countries.

• Headway is an EdTech startup, founded by Ukrainian Anton Pavlovsky, mostly based in based in Kyiv, Ukraine. and launched the CSR project Essence of Ukraine to help the global community discover Ukraine.

• GameTree, an American-Ukrainian SocialTech startup which builds “”inclusive gaming communities”, raised $1.7 million in seed funding from VC firms Corazon Capital, Full Stack Ventures, Goodwater Capital, 32-Bit Ventures, Expert Dojo, and a grant from Overwolf. Founded by Dana Sydorenko and John Uke in 2019, the former is a former paramedic in the Ukrainian Army. GameTree now claims to have 600K+ users across the US, UK, and Canada.