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Know an investor on the hunt for the 'next big thing' in social media? We want to hear from you.

21 de Maio de 2026, 14:01
A young man uses a smartphone while walking across a zebra crossing in Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany, on May 16, 2026. Smartphones and social media are part of daily communication and digital habits among young people. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Business Insider wants to know the names of the top investors hunting for the next big internet hit.

Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto via Getty Images

  • Business Insider is compiling its third annual list of VCs funding social startups.
  • We want to hear from you about who the standout VCs are in 2026 — and where they're placing bets.
  • Please submit your ideas through this form (or below) by June 4.

With AI taking over feeds and the biggest social media platforms feeling less social than ever, there's an opportunity for a breakthrough startup.

Business Insider wants to know: Who is backing those companies?

Some venture capitalists are on the hunt for the "next big thing" in consumer technology — even as VC interest in the broader consumer category is in flux.

There are new social networking startups vying to be the next generation's Facebook, Tumblr, or TikTok. The space is also brimming with new companies trying to disrupt dating and day-to-day life with AI assistants that help you navigate your in-real-life relationships and plans.

We're publishing our third annual list of investors funding innovative startups building technology that's advancing the internet, and meeting the needs of people who want to feel more connected (whether that's online or IRL).

In 2025, the investors Business Insider highlighted were placing bets in categories like IRL social, vibe coding, and platforms for niche interests or communities.

This year, we want to know which leading investors are backing social and consumer-facing internet startups, and where they are placing their bets.

Please submit your ideas through this form (or below) by June 4:

Read the original article on Business Insider

Young founders share 12 pitch decks that raised millions in the AI boom

Ditto cofounders Eric Liu and Allen Wang. Courtesy of Ditto
Ditto cofounders Eric Liu and Allen Wang. Courtesy of Ditto

Courtesy of Ditto

  • Young tech startup founders are having a moment in the AI era.
  • From teenagers to 20-somethings, these founders are raising millions.
  • Take a look at the pitch decks some of these founders shared with Business Insider.

Tech is no stranger to young founders.

Steve Jobs was 21 when he cofounded Apple in 1976. Mark Zuckerberg was 19 when Facebook launched. Whitney Wolfe Herd was 25 when she unveiled Bumble.

Many of today's startup founders are still young and scrappy. And in the age of AI, they're even more empowered to barrel ahead.

Some are following the footsteps of tech titans before them and dropping out of college. Others are opting out of the undergraduate experience altogether, with a few ditching high school to pursue careers in tech.

Arlan Rakhmetzhanov, founder of AI coding startup Nozomio, told Business Insider that he dropped out of high school in Kazakhstan after getting accepted into the competitive startup accelerator program, Y Combinator (YC). At the age of 18, he raised $6.2 million for Nozomio.

Rakhmetzhanov isn't the only teenager finding success in AI. There's also Toby Brown, a UK teen who raised $1 million for his AI project. There's also Zach Yadegari, the teenage cofounder of Cal AI, a nutrition app.

College-aged founders are also building companies and raising capital, such as the Yale students behind Series AI, a new social networking startup.

Alyx van der Vorm (25) and Faraz Siddiqi (23) both raised capital for their startups this year.
Alyx van der Vorm (25) and Faraz Siddiqi (23) both raised capital for their startups this year.

Kevin Farley; Muhammad Anjum

The median age for YC participants is now 24 years old, compared to 30 in 2022, YC's Pete Koomen told The New York Times in August.

Business Insider has interviewed the founders of 12 startups who are 25 years old or younger and have raised millions in funding since 2024 about the pitch decks they used to impress investors.

Read 12 pitch decks founders who are 25 years old or younger used to raise millions:

Note: Founders were 25 or younger when Business Insider published the following articles.

Series A

Seed

  • Ditto, an AI dating startup founded by UC Berkeley dropouts, raised $9.2 million when the founders were 23 and 24. Read its 12-page pitch deck.
  • Lyra, an AI video call startup, raised a $6 million seed out of YC when its founder was 23. Read the 8-slide pitch deck it used.
  • Nexad, an AI adtech startup, raised a $6 million seed after wrapping up A16z's Speedrun accelerator. Nexad's CEO was 25. Read the 10-page pitch deck.
  • Orange Slice, a YC-backed sales tech platform, raised $5.3 million when its founders were 23. Read the 7-page pitch deck.
  • Golpo, a generative AI video startup, raised a $4.1 million seed out of YC when its founders — who are also brothers — were 19 and 20. Read its 7-page pitch deck.
  • Bluejay, an AI agent startup, raised a $4 million seed coming out of YC when its founders were 23. Read its 9-page pitch deck.
  • Novoflow, an agentic AI startup building tools for medical clinics, raised $3.1 million when its founders were 18 and 19. Read its pitch deck.
  • CodeFour, an AI police tech startup, was founded by two 19-year-old MIT dropouts and raised $2.7 million coming out of YC. Read the pitch deck.
  • Cerca, a dating app that connects people with mutual friends, raised a $1.6 million seed when its CEO was 23. Read the 10-slide deck.

Pre-seed

  • Series, an AI social networking startup, raised a $3.1 million pre-seed when its founders were 21.

This story has been updated with additional examples.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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