Kinjal Nandy, a 22-year-old entrepreneur from India, has secured pre-seed funding for his AI startup, Sonatic, at a valuation of ₹191 crore. The funding round was led by Andreessen Horowitz's a16z Speedrun, with participation from investors linked to OpenAI, NVIDIA, and Meta. Nandy dropped out of Cornell University to focus on the venture.
The story highlights a growing trend of young entrepreneurs, particularly from India, successfully launching AI startups and attracting significant early-stage investment, underscoring the global expansion and dynamism of the AI sector.
A 22-year-old Indian entrepreneur, Kinjal Nandy, has garnered attention in Silicon Valley by securing pre-seed funding for his artificial intelligence startup, Sonatic. The company was reportedly valued at ₹191 crore in the funding round, which was led by Andreessen Horowitz's accelerator, a16z Speedrun, and included angel investors associated with OpenAI, NVIDIA, and Meta's superintelligence teams.
Sonatic is focused on human-computer interaction, developing AI systems designed to work alongside users and increase automation. Nandy stated the company's aim is to help users transition from workflows to outcomes, differentiating itself from AI assistants that rely solely on direct prompts.
Nandy, originally from Burdwan, West Bengal, began coding at age 12 and previously developed a machine-learning tool to detect fake news, which reportedly gained over 100,000 users. He later founded an online social platform with a remote engineering team.
He enrolled in computer science at Cornell University in the U.S. but decided to leave the program and relocate to San Francisco. Nandy cited the rapid pace of AI development outside academic settings and his desire to be closer to emerging AI companies as key influences for his decision.