logo
Zango AI Raises USD 4.8 Mn Round Led by Nexus Venture Partners

Zango AI Raises USD 4.8 Mn Round Led by Nexus Venture Partners

Entrepreneur13 hours ago
The funding will be used to scale teams in Bengaluru and London, and to further develop Zango's AI-native Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) product suite.
You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.
Regulatory compliance startup Zango AI has raised USD 4.8 million in a seed funding round led by Nexus Venture Partners, with participation from early backers South Park Commons, Richard Davies (CEO, Allica Bank), Alan Morgan (Senior Partner at McKinsey), Mark Ransford (Notion Capital), No Label Ventures, and Start Ventures.
The funding will be used to scale teams in Bengaluru and London, and to further develop Zango's AI-native Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) product suite. The company also plans to expand into adjacent verticals such as insurance and asset management, building on its success in banking.
Founded in 2024 by second-time entrepreneurs Ritesh Singhania and Shashank Agarwal, Zango AI offers a regulatory compliance platform that combines AI-powered agents with human expertise to automate critical compliance functions like horizon scanning, gap analysis, and controls testing.
The company operates out of San Francisco, London, and Bengaluru and is already used by major financial institutions including Novobanco, Monzo, and Juni.
Zango's cloud-native platform leverages regulatory-domain-specific large language models to build intelligent agents that continuously track regulatory changes, flag compliance gaps in real time, and ensure institutions remain audit-ready — eliminating the need for manual reviews and spreadsheets.
"We don't sell a platform — we sell a solution," said Ritesh Singhania, Co-founder of Zango. "Our AI agents are paired with humans-in-the-loop to ensure 100% accuracy. Peace of mind doesn't come from a tool; it comes from a result. That's why we win against consultants — because they don't just sell software, and neither do we."
Both founders bring deep domain experience: Singhania previously founded ClearGlass, a pension regulation platform, while Agarwal co-founded Third Watch, an AI fraud detection startup acquired by Razorpay.
Anand Datta, Partner at Nexus Venture Partners, said, "The global regulatory landscape is ripe for disruption. Ritesh and Shashank bring a first-principles approach, uniquely marrying AI with compliance expertise. Zango is already augmenting compliance teams and boosting efficiency at global institutions."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

There's Explosive Drama Between OpenAI and Microsoft
There's Explosive Drama Between OpenAI and Microsoft

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

There's Explosive Drama Between OpenAI and Microsoft

The partnership that ushered in our age of AI is showing some major cracks. As the Wall Street Journal reports, OpenAI wants its longtime patron Microsoft to loosen its control on its AI products, while also seeking Microsoft's approval to let it become a for-profit company, which OpenAI has been planning for a while now. But the negotiations have turned ugly. And OpenAI is so frustrated with its benefactor that behind the scenes, executives are considering the "nuclear option": going to court and accusing Microsoft of anticompetitive practices, according to the reporting. That could bring down a review by federal regulators and a public campaign railing against the tech monolith. An antitrust investigation is something that Microsoft has been paranoid about: as Reuters notes, it gave up a board observer seat at OpenAI last year to get US and UK antitrust regulators off its back. It's a stunning breakdown in a relationship that's proven to be one of the most lucrative in tech history, per the WSJ. OpenAI arguably wouldn't be where it is without Microsoft's initial $1 billion investment back in 2019. And Microsoft wouldn't be able to cash in on the AI race — nor enjoy its considerable head start — without the breakout success of ChatGPT, a name that has become synonymous with AI itself. Like certain sparring couples, the pair are still publicly insisting that they're getting along famously. "We have a long-term, productive partnership that has delivered amazing AI tools for everyone," spokespersons for the two companies said in a joint statement, per the WSJ. "Talks are ongoing and we are optimistic we will continue to build together for years to come." There's a lot on the line here. Microsoft benefits from having the rights and access to OpenAI's intellectual property, which it integrates into its own AI offerings like Copilot. OpenAI received heavy investment from the Redmond giant, which became the lifeblood of the company. Both are locked into a revenue-sharing agreement, though OpenAI has recently moved to decrease what it shares with its partner. One point of contention is OpenAI's $3 billion acquisition of the coding startup Windsurf, according to the WSJ's sources. OpenAI doesn't want Microsoft, which has its own AI coding tool called GitHub Copilot that competes with OpenAI, to have access to Windsurf's IP — which again, under their current agreement, Microsoft technically would have the rights to. Another is OpenAI's lengthy endeavor to become for-profit by converting into a public-benefit corporation. Microsoft isn't against the move, but it's reportedly asking for an even bigger stake in the would-be corporation that OpenAI won't even countenance. The pressure's on OpenAI to complete the restructuring, because if it doesn't by the end of the year, it could lose out on an astonishing $20 billion in funding, notes the WSJ. Shortly prior to the paper's reporting, The Information reported that OpenAI wants Microsoft to relinquish its rights to all of OpenAI's future profits in exchange for a 33 percent stake in the new company. Further down the line, the current partnership is supposed to end if OpenAI ever achieves artificial general intelligence, or AGI, meaning a powerful AI that rivals or exceeds human levels of intelligence. It's not clear if this is even possible, let alone if it could be achieved any time soon, but Microsoft is reportedly demanding it keep its access to OpenAI's products even after this milestone, in what OpenAI sees as breaking the terms of the agreement. Cracks have shown elsewhere before this latest escalation. On top of benefiting from its investment, OpenAI has historically depended on Microsoft to supply the vast computing power necessary to train and run its AI models. But OpenAI has started to court others to fill this role as part of its massive Stargate Project, including software giant Oracle, which has agreed to buy $40 billion of Nvidia AI chips to power OpenAI's new US data center. OpenAI has even clinched a deal with Google to gain access to its vast computing capacity, Reuters reported last week. We'll have to see how this shakes out — but we're not necessarily anticipating a chummy conclusion. More on OpenAI: Sam Altman Says "Significant Fraction" of Earth's Total Electricity Should Go to Running AI

X will let AI write Community Notes
X will let AI write Community Notes

Engadget

time25 minutes ago

  • Engadget

X will let AI write Community Notes

In what was probably an inevitable conclusion, X has announced that it will allow AI to author Community Notes. With a pilot program beginning today, the social network is releasing developer tools to create AI Note Writers. These tools will be limited to penning replies in a test mode and will need approval before their notes can be released into the wild. The first AI Note Writers will be accepted later this month, which is when the AI-composed notes will start appearing to users. "Not only does this have the potential to accelerate the speed and scale of Community Notes, rating feedback from the community can help develop AI agents that deliver increasingly accurate, less biased, and broadly helpful information — a powerful feedback loop," the post announcing this feature said. Sounds great. Assuming it works . The AI Note Writers will be assessed by "an open-source, automated note evaluator" that assesses whether the composition is on-topic and whether it would be seen as harassment or abuse. The evaluator's decisions are based "on historical input from Community Notes contributors." Despite the announcement's insistence of "humans still in charge," it seems the only human editorial eye comes from the ratings on notes. Once the AI-written notes are active, they will be labeled as such as a transparency measure. AI will only be allowed to offer notes on posts that have requested a Community Note at the start, but the company is positioning AI Note Writers as having a larger future role in this fact-checking system.

Figma is going public
Figma is going public

The Verge

time30 minutes ago

  • The Verge

Figma is going public

Figma, the platform that specializes in collaborative interface design, has filed for an initial public offering (IPO). The company will trade under the ticker symbol 'FIG' as it prepares to 'double down' on its investments in AI. Figma was nearly acquired by Adobe for $20 billion in 2022, but the two companies scrapped the deal in 2023 after facing pressure from regulators in the UK and the European Union. Last year, Figma CEO Dylan Field hinted at going public last year during an interview included in The Verge's Command Line newsletter, saying, 'There are two paths that venture-funded startups go down. You either get acquired or you go public. And we explored thoroughly the acquisition route.' Figma confidentially filed for an IPO in April. Its new filing reveals Figma's revenue spiked to $228.2 million from $156.2 million when compared to the same time last year. This year, Figma expanded its library of tools to include features for website building, AI coding, branded marketing, and digital illustration. It has also started letting AI models gain access to its design servers to make coding more efficient. 'We're already investing heavily in AI and we plan to double down even more in this area,' Field says in the filing. 'AI spend will potentially be a drag on our efficiency for several years, but AI is also core to how design workflows will evolve going forward.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store