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David Sacks’ Craft leads $42M Series A in govtech startup Starbridge

Justin Wenig remembers his days at Y Combinator in 2019.

Back then, he was working with his first startup, Coursedog, which looked to provide more modern tools to higher-educational facilities, including those that work with state departments. He learned quickly that his peers didn’t like working with the public sector — too much bureaucracy.

Even finding out basic information, like what a school district purchased in the past year, required a lot of paperwork.

“Out of hundreds of startups, only a handful of us were trying to modernize how government and education worked,” Wenig told TechCrunch. “Investors thought it was too slow, too bureaucratic, too hard to scale. And to be fair, they weren’t wrong. Selling to the public sector was painful.”

He sold Coursedog in 2021 for nine figures to JMI Equity and remains on the board. In 2024, he launched Starbridge, a platform that helps business sales teams monitor opportunities in the public sector so they can then take action, such as submitting proposals or drafting bids for grants and budgets. On Wednesday, Starbridge announced a $42 million Series A led by David Sacks’ firm Craft Ventures.

Wenig said the greatest challenges in public sector is that data is fragmented and inaccessible.

“Critical buying information is scattered across PDFs, agency websites, meeting minutes, and outdated directories,” he said, adding that vendors spend hours trying to piece together who to contact and other insights.

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Starbridge pulls public web data sources from such sources and puts the information in one place. The sales team using the platform can see a ranked scoring, courtesy of Starbridge, of which public sector accounts are most likely to purchase new technology, and see updates like leadership changes or new initiatives.

“Instead of chasing noise, our customers have a clear, data-backed view of where to focus and when to act,” he said.

Wenig described his fundraising journey as “fun,” and said the company met Craft through a friend. Others in the Series A round include Owl Ventures, Commonweal Ventures, and Autotech Ventures. The company has raised $52 million to date, after previously raising a $10 million seed.

Next, the startup plans to launch “Starbridge integrated experience,” so users do not have to always go to the Starbridge platform to use its technology.

“Every competitor goes right to your CRM, every question about an account can be answered right from a slackbot, every job change loads right into your sequencer,” Wenig said.

Others in this space include GovWin and GovSpend. Starbridge said it’s different because it has built AI workflows on top of the datasets to make it easier for sales teams to use.

He remembers back when he was fundraising for Coursedog. “No VC was interested in talking to us,” he said. But now, in the AI era, the tides are shifting, he said.

“Maybe nobody wants to run for office anymore, but they do want to build,” he continued. “Seeing this new wave of mission-driven founders tackling real, systemic challenges makes me incredibly hopeful for the future.”