Quick studies: These Kansans just left their college careers for $500K (and a crash course in startups)
March 12, 2024 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
When a friend encouraged Aditya Joshi and Varun Verma to apply for the Y Combinator accelerator program, the Wichita natives didn’t expect to land an interview, they shared — much less get accepted.
“Truly, all we had was this idea and a couple of months under our belt of just talking to different folks,” Joshi explained, noting the idea they pitched wasn’t even the startup they’re now launching. “So when we got in, we were completely shocked.”
Berkeley, California-based Blume — an administrative automation platform for health insurance brokers founded by Joshi, Verma, and Ethan Hou — is in the latest class for the Y Combinator startup fund and accelerator program, which has been used to launch 4,000 companies including Airbnb, DoorDash, Stripe, Instacart, Dropbox, and Coinbase.
The combined valuation of Y Combinator companies is more than $600 billion, according to the funder, which offers programs and resources that support founders throughout the life of their companies.
Click here to learn more about Y Combinator’s standard deal, which invests $500,000 in exchange for 7 percent of a participating company, plus an incremental equity amount that will be fixed when it raises money from other investors.
“It’s also a no-brainer,” Joshi said of joining the accelerator. “This has been all three of our dreams to build a startup.”
“So having the opportunity to learn from the people that have done it themselves — and then also funded thousands of successful companies — it seems like the obvious decision to just take the leap and do whatever we needed to to join the batch and keep learning,” he added, noting the the trio have stopped taking classes at Cal-Berkeley to focus on the startup.
Click here to read more about Blume.
Verma — who grew up on the same street as Joshi and ran an esports company with him while at Wichita East High School — said they’ve already had the opportunity to hear from and speak with the founders of Airbnb and Instacart.
“Learning their stories is always great and very inspiring,” he added.
The accelerator program also gives them the advantage of connecting with a wide cross-section of experts, he noted.
“There’s a lot of really talented engineers that have spent a lot of time at big tech companies and also building infrastructure from scratch,” he explained. “Us being much younger, speaking to these more talented engineers is really necessary at this stage.”
Blume beginnings
With his parents as doctors — and his own experience studying to join the profession — Joshi knew that healthcare would be an interesting and impactful vertical for a startup, he shared. And through his internship last summer at one of the country’s largest health insurance companies, he realized the software in the space was lacking.
“We were comparing that with the software at other big tech companies that Varun and Ethan had worked at and it just seemed like a huge disparity,” he said.
So the trio spent last semester talking to anyone they could in the insurance space, Joshi noted, including carriers, brokers, and employers.
“(We wanted) to figure out how they’re interacting with the insurance ecosystem and where the biggest gaps are, especially with the new onset of AI tools,” he explained. “Where can we start filling in those gaps and making people’s lives easier?”
After pivoting to working with brokers instead of dealing with all the red tape involved in their initial idea, the Blume software they are building will save brokers — on average — 9 hours a week of manual data entry, according to the startup’s website.
“They have to do a ton of manual and redundant workflows,” Joshi explained. “We’re building software that helps them automate all of those workflows. So that they can spend time dealing with their customers, helping them save money, rather than just inputting data back and forth between four or five different platforms.”
Right now, Joshi noted, they are working with brokers to determine their largest pain points to build out the software. The co-founders want to launch the platform in the next couple of months and aim to have their software in 500 different agencies by the end of the year.
“We’re hoping to have a lot of those be in Kansas,” he added. “Because there’s a ton of brokers in Kansas, which is also why we have looked to — after the (Y Combinator) batch — be back home and be where our users will be.”
This story is made possible by Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures.
Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures (EGV) is a business unit of NetWork Kansas supporting innovative, high-growth entrepreneurs in the State of Kansas. NetWork Kansas promotes an entrepreneurial environment by connecting entrepreneurs and small business owners with the expertise, education and economic resources they need to succeed.
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Panel: Teachers can’t just ‘fail fast’ with students, but plugging entrepreneurship into classrooms builds agility in both
As someone with a hand in both education and entrepreneurship, Tiffany Dixon recognizes that a gap between the two is limiting potential in Kansas City schools. “There is an ecosystem that teachers don’t realize exists around their classroom,” she explained during a “Youth: Our Future Entrepreneurs” panel discussion for Global Entrepreneurship Week – Kansas City.…
VIDEO: How KC-built Engenious Design is scaling with stealth to atmospheric heights
Editor’s note: Engenious Design is a financial supporter of Startland News. This video feature was produced through a paid partnership. From life-saving medical devices to unexpected innovations taking orbit, Engenious Design — a white label manufacturing and design firm headquartered in Prairie Village — might be Kansas City’s best-kept success story, teased Chris Justice, principal…
City zoning change melts barriers for artisanal makers building businesses in KCMO
Editor’s note: KC BizCare is a financial supporter of Startland News. This story was produced through a paid partnership. Birdie Hansen started making candles as a hobby during the pandemic, and the business quickly grew to a level beyond what she and her husband David’s home in Midtown could accommodate. Scaling operations for Effing Candle…
VC summit: It’s a great place to ‘keep your head down and build’ — but is ‘KC nice’ slowing potential?
Building a startup in Kansas City comes with a mix of unique benefits and challenges, said serial entrepreneurs Riddhiman Das and Toby Rush, who both agreed the local ecosystem is enjoying “significant” momentum — while pushing the startup scene to be “more aggressive and more brutally honest.” “When you’re on an exponential growth curve, whenever…

