Graft reads everything — newsletters, feeds, research, Slack, PDFs — so you can show up informed without spending hours reading.
YC just quietly changed its batch criteria — they're now explicitly favoring AI-native infrastructure plays over horizontal SaaS. This is the first signal that YC's thesis has shifted since 2021.
#fundraising #strategyA new paper from Stanford shows GPT-4 achieves 73% on medical licensing exams without domain fine-tuning — better than most practicing physicians in diagnostic reasoning tests.
#AI #healthcareSeries A data shows median time-to-close has dropped from 68 days to 41 days. Investors are moving fast on AI deals — the window for non-AI seed companies is narrowing.
#fundraising #marketNo more doomscrolling, no more falling down rabbit holes, no more "I'll read that later." Graft processes your entire information diet and surfaces what actually matters.
Your briefing lands at 7am. Sharp, ranked by relevance, with source links if you want to go deeper.
Follow-up questions get answered with citations. "What changed on the YC criteria this year?" answered in seconds.
Every briefing improves the next. Graft builds a model of what matters to you and gets sharper over time.
RSS feeds, newsletters, websites, Slack channels, Notion, email threads — anything that generates information you need to track.
Three sentences about your work, your industry, your goals. Graft uses this as the lens for every piece of content it reads.
Every morning, a ranked briefing lands in your inbox. Three to five sharp insights. Sources cited. Nothing filler.
"The people who win in complex environments are not those who read more. They are those who know more — and knowing more comes from reading smarter, not longer."
Most knowledge workers are drowning in information and starving for insight. The problem isn't access — it's bandwidth. There's more worth reading than any human can process. Graft exists to solve that. Not by giving you another app to check, but by becoming the layer between you and the noise.
Start with your sources. Let Graft do the reading.