Close Menu
TechurzTechurz

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    This Sequoia-backed lab thinks the brain is ‘the floor, not the ceiling’ for AI

    February 10, 2026

    Primary Ventures raises healthy $625M Fund V to focus on seed investing

    February 10, 2026

    Vega raises $120M Series B to rethink how enterprises detect cyber threats

    February 10, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • This Sequoia-backed lab thinks the brain is ‘the floor, not the ceiling’ for AI
    • Primary Ventures raises healthy $625M Fund V to focus on seed investing
    • Vega raises $120M Series B to rethink how enterprises detect cyber threats
    • Former Tesla product manager wants to make luxury goods impossible to fake, starting with a chip
    • Former GitHub CEO raises record $60M dev tool seed round at $300M valuation
    • Hauler Hero collects $16M for its AI waste management software
    • Proptech startup Smart Bricks raises $5 million pre-seed led by a16z
    • Databricks CEO says SaaS isn’t dead, but AI will soon make it irrelevant
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    TechurzTechurz
    • Home
    • AI
    • Apps
    • News
    • Guides
    • Opinion
    • Reviews
    • Security
    • Startups
    TechurzTechurz
    Home»Opinion»Sequoia-backed Crosby launches a new kind of AI-powered law firm
    Opinion

    Sequoia-backed Crosby launches a new kind of AI-powered law firm

    TechurzBy TechurzJune 17, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Crosby co-founders John Sarihan (left) and Ryan Daniels (right).
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The tech industry talks a lot about how AI is going to transform work. Legal startup Crosby, which just came out of stealth with a $5.8 million seed round led by Sequoia, is perhaps the most extreme example of what’s coming that we’ve seen to date.

    Crosby isn’t just making AI software for lawyers – although it is doing that. Crosby is an actual law firm using AI to provide legal services at a speed never before possible.

    Rather than selling tech to lawyers, Crosby has hired lawyers who use its internally developed AI software. It sells contract-review legal services, largely to startups. The company is currently promising that its AI software, with human overseers, can review a new client contract in under an hour. And it hopes to get that down even faster – perhaps to just minutes, according to its co-founder CTO John Sarihan, who spoke with TechCrunch.

    Ryan Daniels, Crosby’s co-founder and CEO, is a lawyer himself and the son of two law professors. He cut his teeth at Cooley, one of the biggest firms that represents the tech industry. He then spent the better part of a decade doing general counsel work for startups.

    “My last company, where I was the only legal person, grew from about 10 to 100 people, and I found that most of the time that I was spending on legal was for our contracts, sales agreements, [and] MSAs,” Daniels said, referring to the part of a customer contract known as a master service agreement. 

    Contract negotiations and legal review were such a bottleneck at the company that they were the “reason why we weren’t growing as fast as we wanted to.”

    Today, contract negotiation remains a human-to-human process, which can take weeks or months.

    While there are a growing number of AI tools that help lawyers speed up parts of their work, Crosby’s founders believed that the only way to use AI to really change the legal industry, was by “building our own law firm in order to own the entire process, end to end,” said Daniels.

    Sarihan, who was an early employee at Ramp, set about hiring software engineers from the startup world, while Daniels began hiring lawyers. Today the startup employs about 19 people, including the founders. 

    “The innovation here is in the tech and in the people,” Sarihan said.

    The firm soft launched in January, the co-founders said, and it has already reviewed over 1,000 customer contracts — like MSAs, data processing agreements, and non-disclosure agreements — for fast-growing startups like Cursor and the sales automation startups Clay and UnifyGTM.

    Sequoia’s Josephine Chen and Alfred Lin led the seed round with participation from Bain Capital Ventures and a bunch of angels like Ramp co-founders Eric Glyman and Karim Atiyeh, Opendoor co-founder Eric Wu, Casetext co-founder Jake Heller, Instacart co-founder Max Mullen, and the co-founders of Flatiron Health, Zach Weinberg and Gil Shlarski.

    The stars aligned for Crosby to land Sequoia as an investor. Chen knew Sarihan from Ramp, and she had previously met Daniels through the co-founder of Venue, an AI procurement startup she had backed and that was acquired by Ramp last year. 

    When the co-founders pitched their idea to Chen, she asked Sequoia’s in-house lawyer about the idea, and that lawyer, Cindy Lee, knew Daniels from her time at Cooley.

    “When we think about seed investing, for us, it’s probably 70% around the team and 30% around the market, market dynamics, and the insight that the founders have there,” Chen explained. Given all the connections she already had to the founding team and that legal work is a $300 billion industry, Chen was down to disrupt it with Crosby.

    “We had seen, even in our own portfolio [companies], how negotiating contracts can be a bottleneck for growth,” Chen said. Legal, in her view, is “a bull’s-eye case for the use of LLMs.” 

    AIpowered Crosby firm Kind launches law Sequoiabacked
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleWant to ditch Windows? This Linux distro makes that transition easy
    Next Article 10 Classic 1980s Sitcoms to Stream
    Techurz
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Opinion

    This Sequoia-backed lab thinks the brain is ‘the floor, not the ceiling’ for AI

    February 10, 2026
    Opinion

    Primary Ventures raises healthy $625M Fund V to focus on seed investing

    February 10, 2026
    Opinion

    Vega raises $120M Series B to rethink how enterprises detect cyber threats

    February 10, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20251,432 Views

    A Former Apple Luminary Sets Out to Create the Ultimate GPU Software

    September 25, 202514 Views

    The Reason Murderbot’s Tone Feels Off

    May 14, 202511 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    College social app Fizz expands into grocery delivery

    September 3, 20251,432 Views

    A Former Apple Luminary Sets Out to Create the Ultimate GPU Software

    September 25, 202514 Views

    The Reason Murderbot’s Tone Feels Off

    May 14, 202511 Views
    Our Picks

    This Sequoia-backed lab thinks the brain is ‘the floor, not the ceiling’ for AI

    February 10, 2026

    Primary Ventures raises healthy $625M Fund V to focus on seed investing

    February 10, 2026

    Vega raises $120M Series B to rethink how enterprises detect cyber threats

    February 10, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2026 techurz. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.