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Khosla Ventures invests $10M in Synthetic, an AI accountant by the creator of Bench

Khosla Ventures has invested $10 million in Synthetic, Ian Crosby's AI startup. The company fully automates accounting for other startups. Despite the…

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Khosla Ventures invests $10M in Synthetic, an AI accountant by the creator of Bench
Source: TechCrunch. Collage: Hamidun News.
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Venture capital fund Khosla Ventures has placed a $10 million investment in the startup Synthetic — a project by Ian Crosby, the former creator of the Bench service, which shut down several years ago. This time, Crosby is building an AI service for complete automation of accounting for young companies.

What is Synthetic

Synthetic is an AI agent that fully takes on startup accounting operations. No need for accountants or endless integrations with fintech ecosystem services. The agent connects to bank accounts, payment systems, understands which expenses belong to which cost categories, and generates necessary reports. The functionality includes:

  • Full automation of accounting from scratch (from creating accounts to closing the period)
  • Reading and analyzing bank statements and payment transactions
  • Automatic classification and categorization of expenses
  • Preparation of tax declarations and financial reports
  • Integration with major payment systems and banks

This is not the first product in the AI accountant category. But Synthetic positions itself as fully autonomous — without human involvement.

Why Khosla Gave Money to Crosby

Bench, Crosby's first startup, was an attempt to make accounting simple. It attracted dozens of millions in funding and seemed successful — but ultimately shut down. It was a failure worth hundreds of millions of dollars. But here's the paradox: Khosla Ventures, one of the most conservative venture capital funds, allocated $10 million for a new project by the same person. This means several things.

First, venture capitalists believe that Crosby learned the lessons. Second, they see enormous potential in the AI accounting market. Third, even failure doesn't kill a founder's reputation in Silicon Valley — if the investor believes in the idea.

Context: Automation Market is Growing

Accounting is a classic area for automation. Routine, rules, predictable processes. AI handles tasks well that require understanding structured documents and logic. Startups particularly need this: they cannot afford a full-time accountant, but must keep records and pay taxes. Synthetic taps into the wave of demand. If it's reliable, it could become a standard for thousands of young companies.

What This Means

Khosla's investment is a market signal: startup accounting is moving to AI. For founders of young companies, this could mean real savings on payroll expenses and operational simplification. For Crosby himself, this is a second chance — rare in the venture capital world, where one mistake usually means the end of a career. And for Khosla, this is a potential billion-dollar exit if Synthetic becomes the standard in its category.

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