Karumi (YC F25)

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Karumi (YC F25)

Karumi (YC F25)

@KarumiAI

Agentic product demos

SF & NYC Katılım Ağustos 2025
10 Takip Edilen291 Takipçiler
Toni Lopez
Toni Lopez@tonilopezmr·
@yasser_elsaid_ Here's the corrected version: Book a demo with us now. It can be delegated to @KarumiAI, so you can deliver personalized demos to every visitor or user of your product.
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Yasser
Yasser@yasser_elsaid_·
This is my playbook for bootstrapping an AI agent business to $9M ARR. The most important thing is that you need something repeatable and scalable, something where if you do more of, you get more money. You need the equation where you can arbitrage every dollar you spend into more dollars on the other end. Here is how you get there: 1. if you're in B2B, just do the B2B stuff. self-serve is very hard to make work in B2B. it's so much easier to build a sales team, teach them the product, and let them sell it, instead of building a very intuitive platform and hoping people figure it out. that's why all these bigger companies are mainly doing "book a demo with us." they charge customers a lot more because there's no public pricing, and they can set the product up for them. you cannot rely on a middle manager at a non-tech company to put in the effort to use your platform, even if it's extremely intuitive. if you're bootstrapping, you can't hire a sales team on day one. so you need momentum from self-serve customers first. but the goal is to layer in sales as fast as possible, get on demo calls, set up the product for bigger customers, and invest in building an intuitive platform at the same time. 2. content is non-negotiable, even if you're sales-led. good content gets you brand visibility and brand awareness, and that makes all the other channels work much more efficiently. paid ads work much better if people recognize your brand. if they click on your page and see content that people are engaging with, good quality content, it compounds everything. here's what that looks like: video: it depends on your ICP, but we all know video is hard to do, and that's a good thing because it makes the barrier to entry much higher. you can signal that you are a serious business if you do good quality video content. be creative within video, but don't get too creative with the kinds of videos. the kinds of videos you should be doing are product videos and customer videos. that's it. you can be creative in telling your customers' story, you can be creative in launching a product, but don't do the stunt thing, the office content, the random skits. they can work, but you only do them after you do the things that you know will work. hire a videographer in-house. agencies are so expensive (this is just a good rule of thumb). text + personal brands: you need personal brands for everyone in the company. EGC (employee-generated content) needs to be a non-negotiable. everyone on the team posting at least twice a week. 3. warm outbound is the lowest-hanging fruit. warm outbound = outbounding people who have already seen your product. people who interacted with your LinkedIn posts. people who visited your site but haven't signed up. people who created an account but never finished onboarding. these people are the lowest-hanging fruit. email them, call them, put them in a sequence until they become customers. you can have very clear KPIs for your team on this. 4. cold outbound, if your ICP is big enough. be good at writing cold emails and managing your own infrastructure. don't go through an agency. build a system where you can send emails profitably. if it works, send more. if that works, send more. scale it until it doesn't make sense to continue. also do this in-house if it's an important channel. 5. SEO and AEO are extremely important. whenever I want to try a new product, I ask Claude. AI search is a non-negotiable channel now. you need to show up there. that means a lot of Reddit, a lot of review websites, a lot of talking to blogs and backlinking sites to make sure they write what you want with the messaging you want. 6. expansion: be friends with your biggest customers. get on a call with them. know them by name. they need to have your number. they need to be advocates for you. build community around the customer. a lot of founders do not see their customers as friends or a community. they just see them as revenue. that's so bad. your customers need to enjoy spending time with you and talking with you. 7. pricing is the fastest lever. you need to find a good sweet spot for packaging and pricing. incentivize people to spend more money and make sure it's a good deal for them. there's no shortcut, you talk to customers, see what they care about, see what they get a lot of value out of, and capture some of that value while making sure they're successful. 8. margins don't matter early on. if you have a $10M ARR business but you spend $10M to run it, that's fine. you can always cut costs. revenue is the most important metric. it's easier to cut costs than to make more money, so in the beginning, focus on making more money. That's how we built @chatbase to where it is today. Most of this will continue to scale with us as we go to 100M ARR.
Yasser@yasser_elsaid_

9M ARR 🥳 So happy! @Chatbase is going to be a $100M ARR company. Some days I feel it's inevitable, we're past the hardest part, it's almost too easy. Some days it feels too hard and I need a miracle. Constantly moving between "I am a genius, how come no one is doing this" to "I don't know anything about anything". Follow to watch the journey, you will never be this early.

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Karumi (YC F25) retweetledi
Toni Lopez
Toni Lopez@tonilopezmr·
Gave a talk about my YC journey. Most asked questions: "Did you have a business plan?" "How much market research?" "Did you have everything clear before applying?" No. No. And no. Europe wants certainty before starting. YC taught me to act before you think. We applied with one idea. Pivoted 3 times. Found PMF by moving, not planning.
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Karumi (YC F25)
Karumi (YC F25)@KarumiAI·
We are in Times Square this week
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Leonardo
Leonardo@mrloldev·
I was talking with a friend and its crazy that with a good workflow u could have a company literally run by AI have an AI doing sales in linkedin then do the calls with @KarumiAI and create tickets based on feedback from calls or customer support that go directly into @cursor_ai agents and u literally just review and see ur business grow
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Saïd Aitmbarek
Saïd Aitmbarek@SaidAitmbarek·
@KarumiAI thanks for letting me know guys! will try your demo agent this weekend sick landing btw
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Saïd Aitmbarek
Saïd Aitmbarek@SaidAitmbarek·
I'd pay for agent that records product demos all by itself. Like the remotion skill, bundled. Who's building this?
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Pablo Sanzo
Pablo Sanzo@pablosanzo·
@KarumiAI I expected Karumi would give me a live demo of Karumi, instead of the "Talk with us" that is supposed to replace 🫠
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Karumi (YC F25)
Karumi (YC F25)@KarumiAI·
We're hiring Full Stack and AI/ML engineers WHO code a lot. When you apply, start your message with "FROM X:" Apply ⬇️
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Toni Lopez
Toni Lopez@tonilopezmr·
Need your opinion 👀 Comment with RIGHT or LEFT
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Yuriy Zaremba
Yuriy Zaremba@yz_aisdr·
While you're debating whether AI SDRs will take away SDR jobs - here is how AI will erase the SMB inside sales role. Presenting karumi.ai + platform.tavus.io/dev. @karumihq creates conversational, personalized, custom live demos using AI. The agent answers the questions, shows all features live. @tavus creates conversational AI video clones, who read your emotions, answer questions and can have a meaningful conversation. Both have live demos on their website. Check those out. It's still uncanny (especially video), but I can easily imagine AI demos becoming the default mode of SMB sales in 18-24 months, increasing the average "self-serve" check from $100/month to $1,000/month. Human touch will be an exception, reserved for the highest tier, enterprise deals. It will bear the same premium, as we now put into "hand-crafted" products, while the majority of goods are manufactured by factories. Get ready.
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TBPN
TBPN@tbpn·
YC Managing Partner @harjtaggar says we're returning to @balajis's concept of full stack startups, but with AI. "The new trend is going AI native. Not just selling your agents, but using them to build the company."
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