AI data analyst startup Julius nabs $10M seed round

Julius Ai, a startup that describes itself as Amnesty International Data analyst, has announced that it has raised a $ 10 million seed tour led by Bessmer Venture Partners.
Horizon VC, 8VC, Y Combinator and Ai Grant Accessor participated in the tour, along with many prominent owners, including Aravind Srinivas, CEO of Vercel, CEO of Vercel Guillermo Rauch, and TWILIO, Jeff Lawson, from Others.
Founder Rahul Sonolkar Julius launched after he graduated from Y Combinator in 2022 and moved away from the start of the logistical operation that was built during the acceleration program.
Julius is designed to behave as a data scientist by analyzing and depicting large -scale data collections and then making predictive modeling of natural language claims. Even with functions similar to those in Chatgpt, Claude’s Claude, and Google’s Gemini, Julius photographed his own position. The company said it has more than two million users and generates more than 10 million perceptions.
“The easiest way to use Julus is to speak to her only,” Sonwalkar told Techcrunch in a previous interview. “You can talk to artificial intelligence as if you were talking to an analyst in your team, and artificial intelligence, like humans, will manage the code and analyze you.”
The questions that Julius can answer and present in the chart include: “Can you imagine the extent of revenues and net income for various industries in China against the United States?”
Julius specialized in data science until he drew the attention of Professor Harvard Business College (HBS) iavor bojinov last year. Bojinov was very admired so that Sonwalkar asked Julius a specially required for the required HBS course called Data Science and AI to leaders.
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“People told us that you will not work.” “What we found is that focusing on the state of use is really important.”
As YC passed, Sonwalkar was also supported by a viral joke. The next morning to attach Elon Musk Twitter (now X), correspondents faced two men with boxes outside the company’s headquarters. One of the two men was Sonwalkar, who presented himself as a recently developed “Rahul Ligma” engineer.
Despite a bad reputation gained from the trick, SONWALKAR insists that starting it is more worthy of attention.
“I don’t think many people know me about it anymore,” told Techcrunch in a previous interview. “I have been recognized for Julius much more now.”
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2025-07-29 00:42:00