Meet Silicon Valley's new AI startup whisperer

3 hours ago 1

A young professional Indian man smiles standing in front of a window.

Deedy Das. Menlo Ventures
  • Menlo Venture is promoting investor Deedy Das to partner after less than two years with the firm.
  • He embodies a new generation of deeply technical dealmakers climbing venture capital's ranks.
  • Das joined from Glean, where he helped scale the startup from pre-product to a $2 billion valuation.

Last month, in Japan, venture capitalist Deedy Das was supposed to be off the grid, focused solely on proposing to his girlfriend. Two nights into the trip, the deal flow found him anyway.

A founder he'd been getting to know over eight months texted to say he was kicking off a raise. Other investors were circling, but the founder wanted Das and his firm, Menlo Ventures, at the table. So between temple visits and kaiseki meals — and once when he told his girlfriend he was soaking at the onsen — Das coordinated with colleagues back home.

The day after he returned to California, the founder pitched Menlo's partners. That evening, Das — newly engaged — and the founder celebrated a handshake agreement over Japanese food at Ozumo.

In only a year and a half working in venture, Das has quickly become one to watch. He joined Menlo after stints as an engineer at Facebook and Google, and as an early employee at the enterprise search company Glean, where he helped scale the business from having no product to a $2.2 billion valuation. In June, that figure jumped to $7.2 billion.

At Menlo, he's carved out a role at the cutting edge of artificial intelligence, infrastructure, and enterprise software investing. He helped launch the firm's $100 million Anthology Fund, a joint venture with Anthropic, and earned a reputation for his unusually technical diligence. Now, with his promotion to partner, Das is part of a new generation climbing venture capital's ranks.

Two men talk onstage in a brightly lit workspace.

Deedy Das and Anthropic cofounder Ben Mann talk onstage at an event hosted by Menlo Ventures. Menlo Ventures

Increasingly, firms are looking to leaders who come from the trenches of engineering and startups, not just the spreadsheet jockeys groomed in banking. In today's market, where breakthroughs come wrapped in jargon and white papers, technical fluency isn't a nice-to-have. It's practically the job description.

Menlo is bulking up its roster with investors who bring technical bona fides. This year, it hired cybersecurity guru Matt Kraning, who sold his startup to Palo Alto Networks in a deal topping $1 billion.

Tim Tully, a general partner and Splunk's former chief tech officer, previously told Business Insider, founders "want investors who they can talk shop with."

Inside track

Deep learning and natural language processing have always been central to Glean's products. But as models advanced gradually, then all at once, CEO Arvind Jain assembled a dedicated "tiger team" of engineers to fold the latest capabilities into the platform.

Das led that effort, steering the company beyond its original Google-like search interface into something that digests data, interprets it, and can perform tasks on a user's behalf. Today, the company is on pace to hit $250 million in annualized revenue by the end of the year, up from $100 million in 2024.

Jain says the systems and products that Das, who left Glean in 2024, helped create are "still central to how our customers use Glean."

"I've known Deedy for many years," Jain said, "his impact at Glean was significant as a founding engineer — from shaping our products and raising the bar on engineering excellence to mentoring teammates and helping build the culture that carried us through scale."

Two men look at a laptop computer screen.

A discerning Deedy Das checks out a product demo at an event Menlo Ventures hosted in partnership with Anthropic. Menlo Ventures

Das says his background gave him an early read on OpenRouter, which offers developers a single platform to access multiple large language models. Having built a version of the same tool at Glean, he knew the demand would be real.

When he met founder Alex Atallah, Das didn't hedge: "This is absolutely going to be useful. Model velocity is not going to stop. Whenever you're ready to raise, we're in." He laughs now, knowing that he didn't have the authority to promise that deal, but was willing to bluff. Menlo first backed the startup with a modest check through the Anthology Fund before doubling down to lead the $40 million Series A in June.

Over the past year, Das says OpenRouter has scaled from processing about 10 trillion tokens annually to more than 250 trillion — a 25x jump in throughput. Because its business model ties revenue directly to usage, that surge suggests revenue has grown in lockstep.

Das's other investments include Wispr Flow, an app that turns messy speech into polished writing, and Goodfire, a research lab focused on understanding why machine learning models behave the way they do. Both came in through the Anthology Fund before Menlo followed on with more capital. These deals and others earned Das a spot on Business Insider's 2024 list of the rising stars of the venture capital industry.

"Deedy is someone who has conviction in bold ideas where others may be skeptical," says Goodfire CEO Eric Ho. "He has an ability to see the future in a way."

Coworkers laugh together.

Members of the Menlo Ventures team laugh together. Menlo Ventures

The same technical rigor that helps Das land deals also cuts through hype.

A few months ago, Das looked at a pitch from a buzzy startup raising a round and thought its cohort retention curve, a measure of product stickiness, looked too good. He was right. After pulling an Excel file from the company's data room, he ran the numbers through Claude Code to re-graph the curve. He realized the startup had juiced the math to make retention look stronger than it was.

Between sourcing deals and reading white papers, Das also leans on AI to boost his own productivity. He uses Wispr to send texts and clear his inbox faster. With Claude, he vibe-coded a news aggregator that pulls updates from his preferred sources. He's built one agent to research people on his calendar, and another that scrapes LinkedIn to find out who's starting companies.

"It's kind of strange," Das laughs. "We invest in the cutting edge, but most venture firms don't use any cutting-edge technology to do their actual work."

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