All Content from Business Insider 07月08日 17:05
General Catalyst gave a legal tech startup $75 million to go company shopping. It just made its first purchase.
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Eudia是一家快速发展的法律科技初创公司,年收入已超过1000万美元,并完成了首次收购。Eudia收购了爱尔兰的替代法律服务提供商Johnson Hana,旨在为企业法律团队提供更全面的支持。Eudia的AI平台帮助处理日常事务,并计划构建“AI增强”的法律专业人员网络,以更低的成本为客户提供服务。此举标志着Eudia利用General Catalyst的投资,通过收购加速增长的战略,颠覆传统的初创企业发展模式。

💡 Eudia的业务模式:Eudia是一家法律科技初创公司,其核心是利用人工智能平台协助企业法律团队处理日常事务,并计划构建一个由“AI增强”的法律专业人员组成的网络,以降低成本。

💰 融资与收购策略:Eudia获得了General Catalyst的巨额投资,其中大部分资金被用于收购其他公司。此次收购Johnson Hana是Eudia的首个收购项目,旨在扩大服务范围。

🤝 收购Johnson Hana的意义:通过收购Johnson Hana,Eudia能够为客户提供更全面的支持,处理过去外包给律师事务所的复杂事务。Johnson Hana已为Airbnb、X、OpenAI、Stripe和花旗银行等知名公司提供法律服务。

🚀 Eudia的愿景:Eudia创始人Omar Haroun认为,人工智能是法律行业的未来,其目标是提升法律专业人士的工作效率,而非简单替代。Eudia希望通过技术创新,改变法律服务行业的运作方式。

Omar Haroun, Eudia cofounder and CEO, and Dan Fox, Johnson Hana cofounder and CEO.

Eudia, a fast-growing legal startup, has agreed to buy Irish-founded alternative legal services provider Johnson Hana. The terms of the deal are undisclosed.

This is Eudia's first acquisition. Its artificial intelligence platform helps corporate legal teams handle routine matters. It ultimately wants to build a network of "AI-augmented" legal professionals who perform work for clients, particularly large enterprises, at a lower cost than Big Law rates.

"We believe AI is the future of labor," said Omar Haroun, a former lawyer and Eudia's founder and chief executive. "Not in a dystopian way, but more augmented humans who are ready to completely change the work that's being done."

Founded just under two years ago, Eudia already tops $10 million in annual recurring revenue across dozens of clients and, Haroun said, is on track to hit $20 million by the end of the year.

Eudia launched with a bang. The startup emerged from stealth in February with $105 million in Series A funding from General Catalyst, one of the most powerful venture capital firms in Silicon Valley.

The investment had just one major condition: Eudia would get $30 million up front and the other $75 million as it found other companies to buy.

A different kind of investment

The arrangement flips the script on the old corporate development playbook.

Typically, young startups raise small amounts of venture capital to keep the lights on while they crank on building and selling a product, and then they raise bigger rounds of funding as their revenue scales. They might direct some of that investment toward buying other companies — to access new markets, secure talent, or take out a competitor.

Eudia benefits from a different strategy taking hold in startup land.

General Catalyst is one of an increasing number of venture firms role-playing as private equity. The firm and others have been buying mature businesses or consolidating multiple competitors into a single company. The merged company can operate more efficiently by combining costs or applying technology to automate tasks and make more informed decisions.

In Eudia's case, General Catalyst trusted a battle-tested founder with its cash.

Before Eudia, Haroun started a company focused on surfacing sensitive information within large datasets, which proved particularly relevant in legal contexts. In 2021, he sold it to Relativity, a leader in the e-discovery market.

Haroun founded Eudia on the belief that legal teams deserve better than what most white-shoe law firms offer. Traditionally, companies would save their thorniest matters for their outside counsel to solve, Haroun said, but as the demands on legal teams have increased, they've sent more work (and money) out the door.

Eudia aims to help clients perform more work in-house. Its platform ingests everything from existing contracts, policies, and playbooks to past precedents and billing data to build a centralized "legal brain" for each customer. From that foundation, custom agents — software that can carry out tasks autonomously — speed up tasks like manually redlining contracts and running compliance checks.

With its recent acquisition of Johnson Hana, Eudia can offer hands-on support for more complex matters. Clients can now rely on Eudia's growing team of legal professionals to handle issues they once outsourced to law firms or guide them through the platform step-by-step.

Haroun said more details about integrating Johnson Hana, including brand strategy, would be announced in September at the Augmented Intelligence Summit, Eudia's invite-only gathering of legal leaders.

Eudia screened nearly a hundred potential partners before, Haroun said, choosing Johnson Hana for its sterling reputation and blue-chip client roster. Johnson Hana already handles legal work for Airbnb, X, OpenAI, Stripe, and Citibank, said Dan Fox, the company's cofounder and chief executive.

"I remember when I first met the guys, 'I was super clear: I'm not super animated about the idea of simply replacing lawyers,'" Fox said. Neither were Eudia's founders, he explained.

"This is a business model that looks to make lawyers better," Fox said.

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