Fundraising

YC alum Fluently’s AI-powered English coach attracts $2M seed round

Comment

Fluently cofounders Stanislav Beliaev (left) and Yurii Rebryk
Image Credits: Fluently

There are plenty of resources to learn English, but not so many for near-native speakers who still want to improve their fluency. That description applies to Stan Beliaev and Yurii Rebryk, and this is what inspired them to create Fluently.

Making use of AI, Fluently operates as a coach that gives users feedback and tips on their spoken English. This makes it akin to ELSA and its AI speech tutor, as well as online and offline one-on-one coaching solutions, but with the difference that Fluently is building its feedback from listening to calls.

Users can have Fluently record and transcribe their side of real-life calls, for instance while using Zoom for work. However, there’s also the option to practice with an AI coach — either “Ryan” for daily chit-chat, or “Kyle” for mock interviews, which are often a priority for foreign candidates hoping to land a job that requires advanced English speaking skills, as is more and more often the case.

While they are scratching their own itch, the duo estimates that there are 84 million non-native employees who work in English-speaking environments. It is hard to say how many of these would like to be understood more easily, but it is arguably a large enough niche, a growing one, and a much less crowded space than ESL as a whole.

Fluently feedback card
Image Credits: Fluently

This potential market is what helped Fluently get into Y Combinator’s winter 2024 batch, and even before Demo Day, to close a $2 million seed round with participation from Pioneer Fund, SID Venture Partners and individual angels.

It didn’t hurt either that Fluently leans heavily on the tech side of edtech. Out of its distributed team of four, three are engineers, Rebryk told TechCrunch. With a shared background in machine learning, he and his former university roommate have the kind of track record that gets VCs excited these days, with internships at Amazon, Google and Nvidia. 

It may raise eyebrows that none of them are teachers, let alone pedagogy experts. But building a product they need themselves gives them an edge. For instance, they know that people who already speak quite fluently are more interested in a solution that can be used in the background, and only calls their attention to issues that need addressing.

Another point is that Fluently wants to be a one-stop shop for better speaking skills. Rather than accent, its goal is understandability, and that includes improving pronunciation, grammar and pace, as well as expanding one’s vocabulary. Rephrasing advice, like Grammarly or Ludwig offer for writing, could be another addition, Rebryk said.

In its current, beta form, Fluently is clearly still in its early days, and not immune to crashes. But to users who don’t mind sharing their credit card details to give its free trial a spin, it already gives a strong sense of what it could achieve. For instance, yours truly learned how to better pronounce “computer,” which can be quite useful when you work in tech. To at least some, that could that be worth the $25 a month that Fluently plans to charge.

Fluently - computer pronunciation
Image Credits: Fluently

There’s still a page that Fluently could take from Duolingo on helping users correct their mistakes and keep track of their progress in a gamified way. This is usually key in helping people stick to their goals, and motivation to learn a language tends to have ebbs and flows. But rather than learning overall, it wants to leverage technology to focus on a user’s specific difficulties in going from nearly fluent to fully proficient.

One concern with personalization can be privacy, especially with an app that runs in the background and has mic access. For this reason, Fluently insists on telling users during onboarding that their privacy is guaranteed, with audio stored locally, encryption and data protected from third-party providers. On the latter, the startup notes that “data sent to third-party Al providers for transcription is anonymized, and not used for training.”

Some of this is made possible by the recent release of Apple Silicon, Rebryk said. This ties into another limitation of the beta version: It is only available on MacOS. However, Fluently is already building a waiting list of users it will notify when its Chrome extension is ready.

With this in mind, the seed round will help Fluently hire another team member, and have cash to spend on marketing when the time is right, Rebryk said. “When you have a small team, you prioritize what to do first,” he said with a smile.

More TechCrunch

CrowdStrike, the cybersecurity firm that crashed millions of computers with a botched update all over the world last week, is offering its partners a $10 Uber Eats gift card as…

CrowdStrike offers a $10 apology gift card to say sorry for outage

TikTok Lite, a low-bandwidth version of the video platform popular across Africa, Asia and Latin America, is exposing users to harmful content because of its lack of safety features compared…

TikTok Lite exposes users to harmful content, say Mozilla researchers

If the models continue eating each other’s data, perhaps without even knowing it, they’ll progressively get weirder and dumber until they collapse.

‘Model collapse’: Scientists warn against letting AI eat its own tail

Astranis has fully funded its next-generation satellite program, called Omega, after closing its $200 million Series D round, the company said Wednesday.  “This next satellite is really the milestone into…

Astranis is set to build Omega constellation after $200M Series D

Reworkd’s founders went viral on GitHub last year with AgentGPT, a free tool to build AI agents that acquired more than 100,000 daily users in a week. This earned them…

After AgentGPT’s success, Reworkd pivots to web-scraping AI agents

We’re so excited to announce that we’ve added a dedicated AI Stage presented by Google Cloud to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. It joins Fintech, SaaS and Space as the other industry-focused…

Announcing the agenda for the AI Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

The firm has numerous legs to it, ranging from a venture studio to standard funds, where it does everything from co-founding companies to deploying capital.

CityRock launches second fund to back founders from diverse backgrounds

Since launching xAI last year, Elon Musk has been using X as a sandbox to test some of the Grok model’s AI capabilities. Beyond the basic chatbot, X uses the…

X launches underwhelming Grok-powered ‘More About This Account’ feature

Lakera, a Swiss startup that’s building technology to protect generative AI applications from malicious prompts and other threats, has raised $20 million in a Series A round led by European…

Lakera, which protects enterprises from LLM vulnerabilities, raises $20M

Alongside a slew of announcements for Play—such as AI-powered app comparisons and a feature that bundles similar apps—Google has introduced new “Curated Spaces,” hubs dedicated to specific topics. Announced Wednesday,…

Google Play gets ‘Comics’ feature for manga readers in Japan

Farmers have got to do something about pests. But nobody really likes the idea of using more chemical pesticides. Thomas Laurent’s company, Micropep, thinks the answer might already be in…

Micropep taps tiny proteins to make pesticides safer

Play Store is getting AI-powered app comparisons, automatically organized categories for similar apps, dedicated hubs for content, data personalization controls, support for playing multiple mobile games on PCs, and more…

Google adds AI-powered comparisons, collections and more data controls to Play Store

Vanta, a trust management platform that helps businesses automate much of their security and compliance processes, today announced that it has raised a $150 million Series C funding round led…

Vanta raises $150M Series C, now valued at $2.45B

The Overture Maps Foundation is today releasing data sets for 2.3B building “footprints” globally, 54M notable places of interest, a visual overlay of “boundaries,” and land and water features such…

Backed by Microsoft, AWS and Meta, the Overture Maps Foundation launches its first open map data sets

The startup is not disclosing its valuation, but sources close to the company say the figure is just under $400 million post-money.

Dazz snaps up $50M for AI-based, automated cloud security remediation

The outcome of the Spanish authority’s probe could take up to two years to complete, and leave Apple on the hook for fines in the billions.

Apple’s App Store hit with antitrust probe in Spain

Proton’s first cryptocurrency product is a wallet called Proton Wallet that’s designed to make it easier to get started with bitcoin.

Proton releases a self-custody bitcoin wallet

Dental care is a necessity, yet many patients lack confidence in their dentists’ ability to provide accurate diagnoses and appropriate treatments. Some dentists over treat patients, leading to unnecessary expenses,…

Pearl raises $58M to help dentists make better diagnoses using AI 

Exoticca’s platform connects flights, hotels, meals, transfers, transportation and more, plus the local companies at the destinations.

Spanish startup Exoticca raises a €60M Series D for its tour packages platform

Content creators are busy people. Most spend more than 20 hours a week creating new content for their respective corners of the web. That doesn’t leave much time for audience…

Mark Zuckerberg imagines content creators making AI clones of themselves

Elon Musk says he will show off Tesla’s purpose-built “robotaxi” prototype during an event October 10, after scrapping a previous plan to reveal it August 8. Musk said Tesla will…

Elon Musk sets new date for Tesla robotaxi reveal, calls everything beyond autonomy ‘noise’

Alphabet will spend an additional $5 billion on its self-driving subsidiary, Waymo, over the next few years, according to Ruth Porat, the company’s chief financial officer. Porat announced the commitment…

Alphabet to invest another $5B into Waymo

There is no fool proof way to prevent a buggy update like CrowdStrike’s, but there are best practices that could mitigate the fallout.

How to prevent your software update from being the next CrowdStrike

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek says the streaming service is still in the “early days” of its plans to bring hi-fi support to the platform. During the company’s earnings call on…

Spotify CEO says company is in ‘early days’ of hi-fi audio plans

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

The tech layoff wave is still going strong in 2024. Following significant workforce reductions in 2022 and 2023, this year has already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies, according to independent layoffs tracker Layoffs.fyi. Companies like Tesla, Amazon, Google, TikTok, Snap and Microsoft have conducted sizable layoffs in the…

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

Tesla was not the first company to begin working on a humanoid form factor, but while being the first to market does carry weight in this high-tech space, we’re at…

Elon Musk sets 2026 Optimus sale date. Here’s where other humanoid robots stand.

Harvey, a startup building what it describes as an AI-powered “copilot” for lawyers, has raised $100 million in a Series C round led by GV, Google’s corporate venture arm. The…

OpenAI-backed legal tech startup Harvey raises $100M

Digital banking startup Mercury informed some founders that it is no longer serving customers in certain countries, including Ukraine.

Digital banking startup Mercury abruptly shuttered service for startups in Ukraine, Nigeria, other countries

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at Human Interest’s path toward an IPO, fintech’s newest unicorn, a slew of new fundraises, and more. To get a roundup of…

The next fintech to go public may not be the one you expected

Waymo has started testing on public roads in San Francisco a new robotaxi built by Chinese electric automaker Zeekr.  Waymo has “less than a handful” of the Zeekr vehicles in San…

The Waymo-Zeekr robotaxi has come to San Francisco