resources

← prev · next →

High school dropout founds YC startup Nozomio, raises $6 million seed

Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/nozomio-high-school-dropout-y-combinator-6-million-seed-2025-9

Saved: 2026-03-27-181806


Title: High school dropout founds YC startup Nozomio, raises $6 million seed

URL Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/nozomio-high-school-dropout-y-combinator-6-million-seed-2025-9

Published Time: 2025-10-01T09:00:02.985Z

Markdown Content:

High School Dropout Founds YC Startup Nozomio, Raises $6 Million Seed - Business Insider

SubscribeNewsletters

Dow-1.73%Nasdaq-1.93%S&P 500-1.67%Oil+6.25%AAPL-0.34%NVDA-0.19%MSFT 0%AMZN-0.23%META-0.48%TSLA-0.29%

Dow-1.73%Nasdaq-1.93%S&P 500-1.67%Oil+6.25%AAPL-0.34%NVDA-0.19%MSFT 0%AMZN-0.23%META-0.48%TSLA-0.29%

Search

Business

Strategy

Economy

Finance

Retail

Advertising

Careers

Law

Media

Real Estate

Small Business

The Better Work Project

Personal Finance

Tech

Science

AI

Enterprise

Transportation

Startups

Innovation

Markets

Stocks

Indices

Commodities

Crypto

Currencies

ETFs

Lifestyle

Entertainment

Culture

Travel

Food

Health

Education

Parenting

Military & Defense

Politics

Reviews

Home

Kitchen

Style

Streaming

Pets

Tech

Deals

Gifts

Tickets

Video

Big Business

So Expensive

View From Above

Small Business

Authorized Account

Risky Business

Boot Camp

Still Standing

How Crime Works

Life Lessons

Subscribe

My account

Log in

Newsletters

US edition

Deutschland & Österreich

España

Japan

Polska

TW 全球中文版

Get the app

Young Geniuses

I’m a high school dropout who raised $6 million out of Y Combinator. Being a teen founder means you can take more risks.

As told to Geoff Weiss

You’re currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email.

Image 2: Arlan Rakhmetzhanov, standing in front of a white background, wearing a black shirt and jeans, with his hands in his pockets.

  • [x]

Nozomio founder Arlan Rakhmetzhanov.Mariya Harley

Oct 1, 2025, 9:00 AM UTC

Share

Copy linkEmailFacebook WhatsApp X LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Impact Link

Save SavedRead in app

This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? Log in.

  • Arlan Rakhmetzhanov dropped out of high school in Kazakhstan to attend Y Combinator.
  • He just raised $6.2 million for his AI coding agents startup, Nozomio.
  • The 18-year-old says he sees distinct advantages to being a young founder.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with 18-year-old Arlan Rakhmetzhanov, the founder of AI coding agents startup Nozomio, who just completed Y Combinator and raised $6.2 million in funding. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

When I was around 11 years old, my dad told me about Y Combinator for the first time. We were on a walk by the river in my hometown of Almaty, Kazakhstan, and I didn’t really understand the concept of a school for founders — but it captured my imagination.

Both of my parents are entrepreneurs, and my own journey started young, helping sell clothes at my grandmother’s store after school, where she gave me a small cut of each sale I helped make.

In the years that followed, I started reading more about Silicon Valley and figures like Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg. They were self-taught engineers who didn’t just manage people, but knew how to build things.

I took my first computer science course as a freshman and taught myself coding at my American high school in Kazakhstan. I started building my first company at 15, when ChatGPT came out.

Tech Memo

Where Big Tech secrets go public — unfiltered in your inbox weekly.

Sign up Enter a valid email address

By clicking “Sign up”, you agree to receive emails from Business Insider. In addition, you accept Insider’s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

I got kicked out of math class for taking an investor call

By junior year, I’d been ready to leave school for a while. I was bored of my classes, and I was coding at every waking moment, and I just wanted to live in that space forever.

In December, I launched my current company, the product lab Nozomio, after becoming interested in code generation and experimenting with Cursor Composer and GitHub Copilot. The first tool I’m building is Nia, a context tool for coding agents.

In January, I published a minimum viable product on Product Hunt, and it got “product of the day,” and I started cold-calling YC founders for feedback.

One wrote me a $5,000 angel check and introduced me to the VC firm LocalGlobe. I got kicked out of my math class for taking the investor call, which ultimately led to my pre-seed, but luckily, the principal let me take it in her office.

In March, I finally had a reason to leave school: to attend the Entrepreneurs First talent investor in London. But the investment wasn’t a great deal, and I’d closed my pre-seed shortly after touching down, so I ended up dropping out.

My mom was pissed, but realized she had to let go

In the back of my mind, it was still a childhood dream to get into Y Combinator. I’d applied twice unsuccessfully — and my dad’s application had also been rejected for his own AI startup, which fueled my resolve even more.

I applied in late April and got an interview invite in May for the summer batch. I was so nervous I thought my heart was going to stop. The next day, I got a call in the middle of the night in London saying I’d been accepted, and I just started to scream.

I initially told my mom I might go back to school eventually. But when I flew out to San Francisco in June, that’s when I told her I was dropping out for good. She was pissed for a solid week, worried I wouldn’t have a backup plan if things didn’t work out. But ultimately, she realized how serious I was and that she had to let go.

Being young gives you a head start

Being a young founder has definite advantages. Even though I don’t have a Stanford Ph.D., I was told my YC partner selected me because I ship so fast, which is critical in the age of AI.

And being young gives you a head start. There’s still time if you fail, which is why young people try crazy things.

In April, I closed a pre-seed for Nozomio that was less than $1 million, and I closed a seed a few weeks before YC Demo Day for a total of $6.2 million. The seed was led by CRV, BoxGroup, LocalGlobe, and Y Combinator, with participation from angels including Paul Graham and the CTO of Spotify.

I recently got my O-1 visa, and for now, I’m running the company on my own. I plan to use the funds to make my first hire once I can’t handle all of Nozomio’s customers singlehandedly. My aim is to become the leanest AI startup in terms of talent density, and to do that, I want to hire other young builders like myself.

Sponsored by Philip Morris International ### Leadership in the AI era: The case for the human edge Image 3: Leadership in the AI era: The case for the human edge

Image 4

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Image 6

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Image 8

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

Image 10

Business Insider tells the innovative stories you want to know

HOMESubscribe

This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? Log in.

Image 12: Business Insider

Image 14: Download on the App StoreImage 16: Get it on Google Play

Legal & Privacy

Company

Other

International Editions

Copyright © 2026 Insider Inc. All rights reserved. Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of ServiceandPrivacy Policy.

Image 18: Insider.com TM Logo

Image 20: Insider

Image 22: Insider-Inc Logo

Image 24: Tech Insider Logo

Image 26: Business Insider DE Logo

Image 28: Insider Media Logo

Image 30: Insider Media Logo

Image 32: News Insider Logo

Image 34: Silicon Alley Logo

Jump to

  1. Main content
  2. Search
  3. Account
  4. Jump to top of page

Image 37: Headshot of senior creator economy reporter Geoff Weiss

Follow Geoff Weiss

Every time Geoff publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox!

Enter your email

Sign up By clicking “Sign up”, you agree to receive emails from Business Insider. In addition, you accept Insider’s Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Image 39Image 40Image 41Image 42Image 43Image 44Image 45Image 46Image 47Image 48Image 49Image 50Image 51Image 52: dot image pixel