APIs You Won't Hate

APIs You Won't Hate Trailer Bonus Episode 47 Season 1

Building an API for Global News with Artem Bugara from Newscatcher

Building an API for Global News with Artem Bugara from NewscatcherBuilding an API for Global News with Artem Bugara from Newscatcher

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Creators & Guests

Guest
Artem Bugara
Co-founder of NewsCatcher.

What is APIs You Won't Hate?

A no-nonsense (well, some-nonsense) podcast about API design & development, new features in the world of HTTP, service-orientated architecture, microservices, and probably bikes.

Mike Bifulco: Hello and welcome
back to APIs you won't hate.

I, of course, am Mike Biko, one
of the founders of APIs you Won't

Hate, and your podcast host.

I am sitting down today for a conversation
with a new friend of mine to talk

through what is a really interesting
API product with kind of a fascinating

and unique story from inception to
product two, where they're today.

And I'm really excited to sit down and
talk to Artem Bora from News Catcher.

Artem is a, like me, a yc founder
and unlike me, has a really, really

interesting story of the inception of
his company and how he's really built

something interesting through many, many
interesting little bumps along the way.

And I'm really excited
to get to chat with you.

Artem.

Thank you so much for joining.

I, I appreciate it.

How are you doing today?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Hey, Mike.

Thanks for having me.

Yeah, I'm doing, I'm doing great.

Happy to, happy to share something I've
learned so far as a first time founder.

Yeah.

Mike Bifulco: So let's, let's start I
think with, with Tell the World what

let's tell the world what News Catcher is.

So what's your elevator
pitch for news catcher?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): It
is finding my elevator pitch for new

sketcher changes almost every week, but
I think, I think the latest one, I think

the latest one based on like all the
latest interactions and changes in the

in the world is basically new sketcher.

Think our assumption is, I'm
gonna start with a problem, right?

So my assumption is that companies
don't really leverage information

that can be found in news.

Surely if you ask and, and, and
the most important thing is like,

I think they do, but they don't.

But they actually don't.

If you ask like.

The company, they're gonna obviously
say like, yeah, CEO management reads

like Bloomberg or FT, or something else.

And obviously they like really looking
into how like Trump Biden debate is going.

Like who's gonna win?

How the interest rate gonna change, what
the corporate tax, of course that's, and,

and that's like important for big, it's
important like as, as a big microeconomic

shift, like as, as a big thing going
on, or like the war and conflict.

But in reality, like the, that's not
what usually makes company any like.

Money usually in a day-to-Day business.

There is like much more like direct
and applicable things that like are

important and a lot of those actually
can be automated or like semi-automated.

And so our idea is actually for all
the, at least the largest companies,

like each department working for
like each industry in each region.

Usually can benefit a lot by either losing
less money or gaining more money by like

being able, able to leverage stuff that
can be publicly and openly available,

not just like a big kind of things.

So that's where we that, and that's
where we, that's where we are today.

But in more simple, in more simple terms,
I would say that new sketcher basically.

Provides a news, API, we aggregate
publicly available news articles from

over the, over, all over the globe.

And not just like big media, but
local news industry specific news.

And then what we do is we
basically take this, we have over

1 billion or one and a half billion
articles indexed in our database.

All like index and, and, and
easily and being easy to search.

And what we do is we kind of try
to meet an enterprise customer.

Deeply understand what they need and
then say like, look, we have the data

that you kind of, that has insights
and that has stuff that is important

for you, but more of that we are gonna
help you really like integrate it.

We are gonna do like
a bespoke integration.

So a little bit like paler like approach.

And I think that's our, that's
our, that's kind of our thing.

I think one.

Over the last four years doing new
Sketch, I think the most important

insight we realized is that the
biggest problem is not like, you

know, getting data and like getting
articles through the same shape and

form from like over 70,000 new sources.

It's rather to be able to actually
integrate it into like workflow

into day-to-day of, business of some
of, of some specific department in

a specific, in a specific company.

So yeah, that's, that's kind of
where we are where we are right now.

Mike Bifulco: When you and I first
chatted, I was really interested

diving in on your website, looking
at some of the information on there.

The, the heading of your website is
something like news intelligence at a

global scale or something like that.

And from the sounds of it, so you've got
a database with hundreds of thousands,

millions, billions articles 70,000
sources and all focused on aggregating

and providing intelligence around news.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah.

Mike Bifulco: One of the first questions
that my mind ran into is like, how

does that, how do we get there?

How does that start?

That is a, a massive undertaking of a
project, and I'm really curious about

like the story that got you there.

So can you tell me a little bit
about maybe your career leading

up to News Catcher and the reason
that, that this came into existence?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Sure.

So basically News sketcher
has two founders me and Maxim.

Maxim is CTO, I'm the CEO, but originally
we are both non CAS degree data geeks.

Kind

Mike Bifulco: I like it.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): yeah.

So, and, and probably like, I'm gonna
start with like, so I know Maxim already

for like 15 ish years, since like
schooling back in Ukraine in the next.

Then we actually studied together
in one university in Ukraine.

Then we got accepted to the
same university in Strasburg.

And like, so yeah, we got a lot of
actually years been studying together.

And then just for the few years, I
think we've been like a little bit

apart from like doing different master's
degrees and having different our

first jobs basically, but originally.

So we got into, so like I said, we
had like no CS degree engineers, so we

like, we had to do all of it ourselves.

And it actually started one
day in Strasburg, France, where

Maxim came to me and he said, I.

I just like learn about this, like
Titanic dataset, Titanic, like

machine learning competition on kale.

Kale is a website for machine learning
people to like compete with each other.

And it was like, I think 10 maybe, I
think, yeah, I think it was 10, kind

of 10 or nine or eight years ago.

And Maxim and I both kind of, we
studied eh, we studied economics

and I think economics was the
last part we actually enjoyed.

We enjoyed the most like mathematics
and statistics and like game theory and

probability and all this kind of stuff.

And so like these Kaggle and like data
science sounded like a nice trajectory

for us to, to keep working on.

And so we, that's how we got
into like programming by.

Learning RI think we, I think we actually,

Mike Bifulco: Wow.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
yeah, I think we actually

like studied on data camp.

I think there was the website and I
actually remember Maxim one day was

like waking, I think he, he, at some
point he took all the courses, all the

courses and, and, and I dunno how much
actually he learned from them, but

he was like really dedicated to like.

Studied and doing something with that.

So yeah, we, we've been basically
slowly just getting into this.

And for our master's degree, I went to
Toulu School of Economics which is pretty

solid economic school where the, I think
the dean or the head of it has like

a Nobel Prize in economics and Jeanti
Hall, and I started the econometrics.

And that's actually like, you
know, like a, like a, like a

more like applicable applied.

Economic economics economic,
like economic statistics mix.

And Maxim actually started like
something actually that was called,

I guess, data science in Paris.

But yeah we've been there and
one thing that happened, I went

to, after the first year at.

Doing my masters, I found an
internship in a French company.

So basically the CEO is a TSE to School
of Economics alum in Dubai, a vendor.

And, and basically I was like
an, an intern there and then I

said like, look, I don't want to
really go back to, to university.

I know how many more years of education
I need to actually to actually work.

I, I always, I always thought about
it to be fairly honest with you.

And so I started with my very first
job where I was like, just like, I

think I had a lot of freedom and I
could like, try to improve a lot.

And I think that's where like I
understood that like, I really like

coding and one day I, I had a, I
had to do some web scraping job and

that's how I said like, okay, it's
finally time to like open Python.

And I think this, in one day
I started doing something in

Python and then I came back to r.

And yeah, and since then I, I was like
really passionate about Python and I was

trying to do a lot of like side projects
as well as Maxim and we chatted about it.

We really, we really liked it and I.

I guess at some point I realized one
thing, I don't know anything about Python.

I know like Python, but I don't even
know what server is, how internet works.

And so I had some side project
where I decided to go from zero

to one, like following like
Y Cator startup school thing.

And so basically I, I, I've launched like
a, like I was like scraping some news

actually, like comparing some coverage
for, for the, some something in Ukraine.

I think the, the, the
presidential election.

But basically it was like pretty cool
'cause I, I had to learn everything

and I think I still remember this
evening where I realized that, well,

database is actually like, you can.

Get it running with one Linux call.

Like, it's like Postgres apparently
doesn't have to be like, it's not

a big building with like data.

It, it is pretty much, it's
pretty much easier than that.

And I think that that was like, like
really I was working a lot and like

I was doing my side project a lot
and for like two months I, I kind of

learned a lot of stuff about like how
things work, how servers work, what

AWS is like, how, how everything works.

And I really kind of enjoyed it.

And since then I felt like.

It is pretty cool.

I should probably do something
I should probably do something

something of, of my own with that.

And I guess by the end of 2019
I was just looking for another

like side project technically.

Interesting.

I just found this like other new
EPI and I and I thought like,

look, it sounds like a good idea.

Even though I don't really
have any problem with it.

I don't know anyone who needs
it, but I just thought like.

It's a really cool technical challenge.

And so that was like a side new sketch.

It was like a side project
in the, in the beginning.

And so I guess if you, if if there's
anyone listening to me like it's having

a cool technical challenge is a, is a
great reason for the side project and

it's probably like the worst reason
for like starting actually a company.

If you dunno, you dunno
what you're doing for who.

Like, and that's what a lot of people do.

They kind of like assume, I think.

I think they assume that.

Something is needed.

They build it, they ship
the code, no one uses it.

They select yes, we need more features.

They add more features.

Well that, that's not,
that's not how it works.

But anyway, one thing, but the few things
from startup school that we, so yeah, and

I, and I asked Maxim to join me and, and
we started like remotely, it was beginning

of 2020 there was some rumors about this
big kind of flu stuff going on in China.

And so we thought like, yeah, that,
that's probably like the really.

Which for people listening us from 2000
55 there was a thing called co covid.

And so yeah, we, it thought like,
okay, like the whole, the whole plan is

gonna shut down, but that sounds like
just the right time to quit my job and

start, start new sketcher, any end.

So we took the basics of Y
Combin, which is like launch fast.

Talk to your users, focus on everything.

What's important.

So we just said like, okay, we
gonna give ourself two months

to build some kind of MVP.

We're gonna release it.

And that's how it all, that's
how it all kind of started.

In two months, we
actually released our MVP.

We actually, I wrote a blog post.

There was like a blog post.

How we've done it mostly on like.

Credits from startups called and AWS and
mostly using just AWS Lambdas and Dynamo.

So it was like, and,
and AWS Elasticsearch.

So it was a lot of like cloud
slash serverless solutions.

So yeah, we just, we just kind of, we
just kind of launched and surprisingly

it was a really nice, it was a really
nice thing to do because that got us some

kind of like, attention from the crowd.

I think I've done a lot of like
passing on Reddit and hack news.

To figure out like if people like it.

So I think at this stage we kind of
realized that yeah, like people like it.

And we thought like, this is an, even
though no one was really like, yeah, take

my money and, and give me the access.

But it felt like, yeah, that
there's like some buzz around it.

Like people, people think it's cool.

So we should probably, we
should probably keep doing that.

Mike Bifulco: Sure.

Yeah.

You've taken a really interesting path.

So I, I would guess you may be the
only person I've ever met who started

coding by learning R and found your
way into building a full on product.

Like I think there's probably a lot
of data scientists, data engineers,

whatever they're called in 2024.

Who, who learned R or Python
or something like it first.

It's definitely a fully inverted way to,
to get yourself to learning about servers

and the web and all that from there.

And I'm, I am really intrigued by your
ability to drum up interest too, right?

Like, that's always an interesting
part of the story for me as well.

So you mentioned writing some blog
posts and getting attention for your,

your MVP and your early prototypes.

It's the chicken and the egg
problem, especially for something

like what you've ended up building
is really fascinating to me.

And it sounds like you found the right,
right ways to get people pointed to it.

I, I saw earlier I was googling
your name and saw your post

about your trick to drum up.

I think it's something like a thousand
plus stars on your GitHub repos.

Right.

Things like

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): yeah.

Mike Bifulco: you, you've got a
marketing muscle somewhere along the

lines, and I'm, I'm curious how you.

Landed on that?

Like is that just a natural thing for you?

Is that something that you've
gleaned from people you followed?

How did that happen?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah.

So I guess the, I, I'm trying to think.

Yeah, so we have, I think I have
in total like maybe 5K stars.

I've done two like things, some really.

Like it's, honestly, it's like a hundred
lines of code in Python, but like

done something useful, very connected,
basically like the RSS feed of New York

Times with just name New York Times
and you type New York Times and you get

all the latest news from our, it's RSS.

It's something really easy, but
no one thought about like doing,

doing this, but I guess, yeah.

So this, this kind of marketing or like,
let's call it like go to market through

developers is actually not, I, I don't
think it's, it's right now it's not.

It, it's, it's one of the, honestly, it's
not what you should do in the beginning.

What you should do is you should
like, call people and like talk

to them and like email them.

But I probably started it 'cause I
knew that like, you know, early on I.

That's the only thing I actually,
I, I, I, I think I thought

I understand how to write.

Yeah.

I was, I was writing some
technical blog posts before, like

in the last six years and stuff.

So I thought, like, I feel like I
understand really well how to write

and how to talk to developers,
and that's actually someone

who I consider myself to be.

So that was just the thing that I
thought I will do the best, not.

Maybe I also thought back then that
this is like the right approach.

So we were just more into like, you
know, we'll just try, try something

and let's say it's something that we
probably assume that we know the best.

So that's kind of why, I think that's
why we decided to talk to like no, try

to try do like I think it's, you can
call it like the bottom up approach

or like trying to talk to which, which
actually ended up I think not being.

I dunno.

I think, you know, it's really hard to go
and like write emails and talk to people

and try to get some like decision makers
to talk to you people with real problems.

And I think, and it didn't help honestly,
the fact that we spoke just to developers.

'cause usually I.

A lot of them, they themselves don't know
what they do or what they need is like,

you know, not really something critical.

They just wanna play
around with something.

So I, I guess for some industry, maybe
this works, but for our, that, that's,

I don't think that's like kind of
the, the right, the right approach.

And I think like we lost a lot of time
trying to talk to wrong people, basically.

Mike Bifulco: Yeah.

that is.

Also an interesting angle too, and you,
you've said this in a way that a lot

of founders who have been through the
process and have, have found their way

into a product, say it, that in hindsight,
there's definitely other things you could

have done, but really the fundamentals
that we hear a lot of, go talk to as many

people as you can who you think might be
your customers before you build something.

Validate the idea, then spend time
building it, and then, you know,

iterate, keep talking to them over
and over and things like that.

I'm really interested too, that you came
to this through YC Startup School and then

from, from our sort of prior chats, I, I
know you had an interesting way of even

getting into your Y Combinator batch too.

Can you tell me a little bit about that?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Yeah, so we applied to yc, I think

first time We applied as soon as
we started, and we applied in total

of four times with new sketcher.

And we got invited to interview twice
with new sketcher, and we actually

got accepted, got invited to YC twice.

With new sketcher in summer 2021,
we had to decline like going to

Y Combinator because we already
agreed to go to Tiny Seed, a small

kind of program for Bootstrappers.

So we took some money from them and took
this like year to basically just like.

Do our small bootstrap thing as,
as we thought, like it doesn't

have a big enough kind of market.

And then basically we reapplied
in 2022 for summer 2022.

We got into interview again.

It was with Michael sbo from 2021 to 2022.

We grew from I think three.

So we started, when we
started we had like zero MRR.

Then when we applied in six months,
in 2020, I think we had like, like few

hundred bucks, maybe a seven bucks.

MRR then we first accepted to, so it
was our third application in 2021.

We were at like three KMRR, but,
and then, you know, they kind of

like accepted us and we said no.

I said, like, we
explained it was all fine.

I think big kudos to Brett Flora,
who, who were the partner there.

And we reapplied one year later and we
kind of was like, kind of really, like,

I spent on a application, probably like
a day, really, like at this point I

didn't like spend that much time there.

But I think we, we got really like,
you know, nervous because like right

now we already got some money, so
we had to show actually some growth.

So we grew from three K to 20 K.

And I guess, I don't know what, but like
why C why C accepted us again and I was

really happy we are like this Michael.

'cause I think.

I was, I'm, I'm a big fan of I'm a big
fan of his and I think few things for

people who kind of wanna apply to yc.

I know there's, I actually think
I know why we got accepted, so

I, I have some like, kind of as
assumption about why we got accepted.

So a, a, a few things here.

Like, first of all, we got
really consistent, so we applied.

First time we said we're gonna work on it.

We applied Second time we said like,
yeah, we actually worked on it.

We applied this short time.

We said like, yeah, you know,
like, you didn't get back to us

first two times, but look, we get
some progress and so on and so on.

I guess it's really important
to show kind of, you know, the

consistency that you, that you have.

I guess a lot of people think like.

That's what YC kind of actually assume.

Like, okay, you have some idea, you
say you want to commit to it, but like

if we don't get, if we don't accept
you, are you actually gonna work on it?

'cause like, usually I think you
should, you should work on it.

Whether you get to YC
or not, YC shouldn't be.

Or that's not the only way
to start like a startup.

And I guess, you know, I, I'm,
I'm, I'm, last time there was

like applied to YC on high canoes.

There was like a lot of
crowds saying how YC is.

Bad or how a lot of companies
do like millions of a RR without

funding, which is again, true.

I, I don't say anything about it, but
YC is trying to invest into people

who like, say, like we are gonna build
a billion dollar companies, or like

trillion dollar companies, and obviously.

That is a really different path
from like, you know what you can do

bootstrapping and you know, if you
are solo founder and doing million

dollars a year and spending on it,
probably like three K bucks in a s bill.

I mean, honestly that's, that's,
that's absolutely fantastic.

You just like cashing out all the money.

But it's not a billion dollar company
still, even though you can get paid

more than founders that actually
started a billion dollar companies.

And one thing that stood out to me
on the hack news, there was like,

I think someone saying like, how.

People in, in yc they like,
you know, they need to go to

Harvard or MIT or this or that.

And, and I thought like, you know,
it's, it, it's, it's probably true.

It's true because the best kind of
kids get accepted to M-I-T-M-I-T

doesn't really give them that much.

Harvard, it's actually like they
have such a high bar that obviously

doesn't market for like kind of
people, but YCI think has always been

and still is a place for outsiders.

And I guess the biggest kind of.

The biggest biggest companies are
built from outsiders, and I guess

that's something you can probably tell,
you can probably like say about us.

Maxim and I are like first time founders.

We never studied computer science.

We got into coding.

We started new schedule
by quitting our jobs.

We come from, we like kind of, we
come from a country, from a region

where the war started in 2000.

14.

So we are like a typical exam and like we
don't have any like cool kind of degree.

The, the places we work at were like SMBs.

We never worked at like Microsoft, apple.

We had not like no good school, no good
university, no good, like place of work.

Like none of this is
really like a requirement.

So it's rather being consistent.

And I think the last thing I'm
gonna say about YC and people get

who try to get accepted to yc.

I recommend a lot of people to YC
and then I, they get to the interview

and they, they get rejected and I
ask them why, and they tell me like,

yeah, they told us about because
of this or that, and I'm looking at

them and say like, look, don't worry.

Like I don't have this
figure out yet either.

So that, that's like,
that's one of the reason.

But I guess the biggest
one is like YC in people.

They kind of, if you are like a great
founder with like the, honestly, what

you're gonna think is like the stupidest.

Idea that never gonna work.

They still gonna fund you.

'cause they know that like you are
smart enough to like validate it,

understand that it doesn't work.

Change your mind and
build something great.

So YC really invest in people,
not ideas or anything like that.

Mike Bifulco: I concur and
it's a hard thing to convey.

I.

You will see a lot of things online
about people applying to YC and

getting no message back, but getting
rejected, not hearing back, getting

an interview, and getting rejected.

And I think the, the through line in
your story, and from what I've seen and

observed with my company and with others
that have been through the program, is

that not only is consistency important
and people being invested in the problem

they're looking to solve, but showing
some, penchant to listen to feedback

and make change based on your business.

So when they say they're, they're
investing in founders, it is really

like the type of person who wants
to build a company that the company

will be successful and not the
type of person who has an idea.

And it has to be that idea.

Many YC companies have been through
pretty wild, like 180 degree pivots

that have moved them from, you
know, one, one area of the world

to something completely different.

And, it's a subtle, weird thing.

I like you.

I'm also not an MIT or Stanford or Harvard
or, you know, wherever Carnegie Mellon

grad I went to a humble public state
school here in the US and have stumbled

through a lucky career at since then.

But I, I, I think a lot of the folks who I
met, especially going through, the summer

program at yc at the very beginning,
last summer, we kicked off with a an

outing, a week long weekend where all
of the YC founders for the batch went.

And one of the things that was
consistently true with every founder

that I met was imposter syndrome.

Everyone thought they didn't belong
there for one reason or another.

I'm too young, I'm too old.

I haven't finished college.

I don't know if my idea is good.

I'm not smart enough.

All these things.

That's, that's maybe hopefully a happy
thing to hear for a lot of people.

Like nobody really thinks
they can do these things.

And it's an important thing to
realize that we're all fallible

in some way and we're all you
know, just, just trying our best.

It's not like there's some
secret handshake that.

makes.

YC founders better or different
or whatever than everyone else?

Yeah.

I don't know.

Maybe I should get off
my high horse there too.

There's definitely a lot of privilege
wrapped up in what I'm saying, so yeah.

Okay.

So Artem you went through the YC
program, that was your, your, you

were summer of 2021 was your batch,
so that was a few years ago now.

Tell me about where news catcher is now.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah.

So we in summer 2022, we went to yc.

Mike Bifulco: 22.

Sorry.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): yeah.

So two years, yeah, two years ago.

So so yeah, when we went to
yc, we didn't, we had a lot of.

Different types of customers, basically,
like people doing probably like the,

like a lot of platforms who need an
integrated news or something like that.

And I guess when I first meeting
with Michael Sebel, he was like, okay

guys, I like doing like, what is this?

Like, is it like for enterprises?

And we said like, yeah, it's
probably should be for enterprises.

And he's like, okay, so what is your,
like what are we trying to, like how many

like calls and sales calls do you have?

And I'm like, well, we, we don't.

And he's like.

Yeah, so you should probably go and find
four and, and get four pilots before YCR.

So you have pilots with real
companies, with enterprises.

And I kind of, I thought I, I did
actually that, but then I realized

that I have practically like four
people interested enough, but not

actually like, signed anything or like,
not even like agreeing on the price.

Well, long story short, it ended up
really well we, we closed a few big

contracts, I actually like, got into
full y like I I, I flew to one guy to

his like villa in Italy for like one day.

And it was actually ended up being a
lot of partying and then like next day,

fortunately we, we got all him and I
well, we both like woke up actually

early, so we actually have like 20
minutes to discuss the business.

We did some kind of like handshake
agreement that they're gonna

become our customers and yeah,
by demo day we basically like.

Had like, nothing much changed, but we
just had more customers and like more kind

of idea that, that it should be working.

So by our demo day, we
already had like 400 450 KARR.

Which, which isn't actually
honestly that, that good.

If anyone listen to me.

It's really good if you have that
after you, like just started yc.

But if your company already exists for
quite a while, that's also like, I don't

know if, if that's a good result or not.

But then basically we got
we got great investors.

Like we, I spent fundraising like two days
actually, that's one of the magic of yc.

And yeah, we got, we got, we, we got
a small round that we just needed

really fast and get back to work.

And I think we kind of,
I'd say, didn't do that.

I think what we should have done,
we, we didn't, we didn't do that.

And so the 2023 was somewhat like
us being like adding more customers,

but struggling to find like, where
is the market, where is the product?

Product, what is the problem?

Where is the kind of feed?

And I think only now.

So we getting kind of
hell of a year in 2024.

I think.

Partially because like largely,
which models got like much more.

A lot of people right now understand
that like how easy it is to work with tax

and now they need great sources of data.

And one thing about us, we got really
lucky 'cause we always doubled down on

data quality while a lot of competitors
like did on like NLP and stuff.

And like with large language models,
basically all UNLP is like now,

like everyone is at the same level.

You need to start from zero.

And it got really easy.

And I think we recently,
like we are hopefully like I.

Soon gonna end up on like, having
almost already a hundred percent

growth since the beginning of 2024.

And I think we, we, at the stage where
I realized that what we should do is

basically we should do like plenty of
like deployments, more like onboardings.

We have great data.

We know that in this data,
there is a lot of value for a

lot of enterprise customers.

We know that no one does those like
bespoke kind of integration, well,

especially big companies that can't
afford it for the same price as we do.

Even though we charge like six digits,
like, you know, Microsoft engineer

with like a million dollar salary.

Like, you never gonna be able to like,
you know, to, to afford the same stuff.

And so basically what we do is like,
we take our data we take a lot of

like different LLM based like models.

We take our customer's data,
which is usually the, the trick

is like, it's usually like
different from, for each customer.

And we say like, look, based on
the data you have and the data

that we have, we're gonna try to
build like a, like a connection.

Then we will try to make sure that like
our data, like it was really work like.

In the most like excellent way possible.

And so you actually can have, can
have something that works really

great and works really great for you.

And the thing is like, and it's, and
I don't see other way, like some of

our competitors trying to build like
kind of NLP and Reach news API and.

What we hear from our customers, like,
yeah, we try, we try this, but it doesn't

work because like, yeah, it has a lot
of different tools, but it's, it's

never enough to like perfectly feed.

And so we said like, like,
look, just try to believe us.

We have the more accurate, like
the coolest data that you need.

And we actually gonna spend a little bit
of time making sure that like we like.

To do the integration initially
and then it's gonna work.

And I guess that's our,
that's our plan right now.

And one of the beauty of this is like,
it actually works really well because

like, one, we can charge a lot for that.

And like we can, we, you
know, we can have, I.

Like this onboarding, we can actually
spend a lot of time and resources to make

sure that it works, because again, we
need to do it once and then it's like,

you know, it, it, it, it just working,
doing the same thing with obviously

doing some kind of like supporting and
maintenance in between, but it works.

And two, that's like, I think like the
only, like the big superpower that we

have is that we can invest all those like.

Custom thing and like a lot of like our
time to actually make those connections.

And that's one of the things that
like the big companies can do.

And that's one of the very
few, that's what YC says.

Like you need to do.

Like really, you need to make your
customers really, really, really happy

because you can and no one else can.

And one of the best thing is like.

It makes much more sense when you do
like big checks because if you build in

something that like, technically you'll
have to scale to like, let's say like

million of users you know, custom, you
still need to like do a lot of like talk

to your customers e each and every one.

But it's, it's really hard economically to
do for really long when they pay you five

bucks or like 50 bucks or 500 bucks and
it's much easier when they pay you half.

You can, you can extend this like kind
of, you can extend this period of time

for much, much longer if you, if your
customers pay you much more and like

continuously learn and any end, we are
at this stage where we're like trying to

build a lot of those different connectors.

For a lot of different use cases, but
at some point we, like, it's know every

additional customer get like, it, it, it
becomes easier and easier for us to do so.

So hopefully at some point, which
is actually like I, I do this, I

just recently started to learn about
like Palantir and that's what, like

Palantir have been doing this for
like 10 plus years and only recently

they started doing actually products
that kind of like somewhat scalable.

So I think Palantir is like a
great, great example of like how.

Given those bespoke integration,
actually can, can still make

you like, I don't know, like a,
a multi-billion dollar company.

Mike Bifulco: It is a the economic
match there is really interesting.

Like the Palantir is a, is a quiet
giant I think for a lot of people.

Like I, I, I think possibly the audience
of this podcast is, is more familiar with

Palantir than let's say 95% of the world.

But the way that businesses like that
grow and become successful has a lot to

do with their early plans and like the
targets that they, they try and land and.

Getting, getting your business to a
state where you know, you're growing

by leaps and bounds is also something
that requires that level of strategy.

And as what I would imagine is,
is a, a scrappy little company

in comparison to Palantir.

There's different ways to do that.

Definitely a different
ends to those means.

But it's certainly possible too.

And, and I think it's a fantastic
story and a really cool thing to see.

Like, just, just how you've grown from
like you know, a project in your flat

and, and suffering through learning r
and moving to Dubai and all these things.

To something that's really a, a growing
and inertia gaining project over the

years and especially now, I would
imagine being in a season where news

is going to be more and more important.

And LLM certainly have gained an
impossible amount of popularity.

It's probably an interesting
year for you is, is so.

I should couch this in the fact that
you and I are recording this the morning

after the very first US presidential
debate which I could not watch last night.

I just didn't have it in me to turn it
on for, for a million different reasons.

But do you, do you imagine that
the sort of political the, the

election season in the United States
will ratchet up user base for you?

Do you think that'll have
an impact on your end users?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
I think not really.

And the reason for that is like, it's
exactly what I was talking about.

Like our customers, like,
I think such thing as like.

Like, you know, the presidential
debate is, is usually something

that like stakeholders, like chiefs
should just read and understand.

There's like nothing that
much that you should do.

However, if.

A company that owes your company money,
has some small news that their branch

getting closed, that they like, kind
of had a fire or something, or that

they actually like a five news local
news this year that they are changing.

The c or that's what you kind of,
that's what is like a, like a, like a

stuff that people really don't think
about, but then they, but one, but

one day it like hits back on them and.

And then they come and see like, okay,
look, every time someone doesn't pay

us, we actually, so where one bank
says like, they, they don't pay us.

And we go and check like why this
happened, how could we know this

Mike Bifulco: Hmm.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): And
they go, we go and check the news.

And we realize that like, okay, probably
if we were reading like the local

newspapers, we would knew that months
ahead that probably they not doing right.

And like, and sometimes, sometimes
they're like, and we even give them

more money when they ask, but like
financial reports were like, fine, but.

Financial reports are not something you
get on like every day and like, you know,

probably if, like, yeah, if, if if company
changes management like really frequently,

maybe there is like, something wrong
with it or, or like, all of those facts.

So like all of those things
like, it, it can like, you know.

It's not probably like going to be
like a billion dollar change for each

company, but there is a lot of those
small, small little things that can

be, that can be captured and like
you honestly like missing those or.

Directly, or like indirectly can, can
cost like tens of millions of dollars

for, for per department of big companies.

And that's kind of where we're
trying to, where we're trying, but

obviously like there's always gonna
be like people trying to build like

news, website coverage, comparisons,
sentiment or, or Trump and Biden.

And it never, and it never kind
of like, it never monetizes

into anything I feel like.

But yeah, so we are like trying
to do a little bit more like.

Not mainstream stuff.

And that's why I say like, you know, some
companies think that they follow news

while invalidate, they follow like the
biggest news that everyone follows, but

they don't really follow news that can
affect their business in a day to day.

Mike Bifulco: Of course.

And for you, having, having this
strategy must have a leveling effect

where seasonality is not something that
you have to deal with quite as much.

And from, from a founder's perspective,
it's nice to have predictability and

growth and stability maybe in, in ups and

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah.

Yeah.

And that's, that's, that's another
really nice thing about like enterprises

and like doing deep integration.

'cause like, honestly, if we succeed
and if it works, I don't know what has

to happen for, for them to like go to
someone else or like to do something else.

'cause like, even like, because then
even just to change it to someone,

it is like already gonna be like a.

Like maybe a half a million investment
for company, like in terms of

like salaries and change and all.

They, they will like customers, if you
do something that fits like a glove

and it works for them, customers,
like they're gonna stick with you.

Like your LTV is gonna be like huge
because like, unless they, unless

it doesn't bring them real value
or unless they kind of run out of

business, run out of money, you are
kind of like you are married forever.

Mike Bifulco: Yeah, no doubt.

Yeah.

Okay.

So let's, let's jump into
the nitty gritty of it.

Tell me about the, your, your tech stack.

Like the API developers are, are
thirsty for nerdy details at this point.

So tell me what how you've built news
catcher in the the bits and pieces

you've tied together to make it all work.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Okay.

That's funny.

So long story short, we
have everything is like.

Deployed in the, on-prem on Kubernetes.

Mostly.

One thing I wanna say is like, it's
not something really you should

worry about is, especially when
you're like a small startup, you,

you have to start as fast as you can.

And that's why we started
with AWS and Lambda function.

But then one thing we found out
is like, if we get, like, if for,

for whatever reason, you know,
we are like a small customer to

or GCP or anyone else, if we get.

Kicked out of them.

Not only are we gonna have a problem
that like we just need to find other

servers, but also gonna get bounded to
like, like proprietary like services.

And it's sometimes really
hard to like change those.

So we said like, look, we're gonna do
everything open source, everything's

gonna be infrastructure as a code.

And you know, if something happens or like
we need to scale, we can just like deploy

the same kind of stuff on other clusters,
on other, like on other hardware.

And that's what we do.

So it's all Kubernetes and like a
lot of dockers a lot of different

microservices, I assume that
like, are connected together.

And our main stack is like Python
MQ for like event processing.

Elasticsearch for indexing the data.

And to be fairly honest, there's
probably like 50 other different

technologies, but they like.

Small

Mike Bifulco: That makes sense.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Like
fast API and, and we do, you know, like

a lot of right now, like basic LLM,
we've like fine tuned, we fine tune

like mis trial seven B for example.

Actually one, one thing I would, I
would, okay, we know their customers.

I think we're using their open
source service, but I think

they're really great company.

Open, open pipe by.

It's a great company
for help you fine tune

Mike Bifulco: cool.

Open

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): yeah.

Open pipe.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I think the guy, the founder,
he's actually an ex y Combinator.

He's an ex XY Combinator
software engineer.

Yeah.

Oh, he has a, basically a great lending.

He has a great lending page.

It, it has some great ROI numbers,
25 times cheaper than Gvd four.

5 million to start and $17 million
saved by our customers this year.

That's a great, great, great.

Mike Bifulco: That's a solid pitch.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
So to be That's what I like.

I, I like people like trying
to understand the value.

Yeah.

So we use an open pipe, for example,
for, for fine tuning some stuff and

yeah, it's, it's all kind of open source.

No, no kind of proprietary
not much proprietary stuff.

Mike Bifulco: Okay.

And tell me about news catcher's
story from a open source perspective.

Have you, you made any of your software
available for people to peek at?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Yeah, we don't really have other

software available just because
it's not really kind of possible.

But we have two things.

I have a few open source project.

One is actually called New Sketcher,
the one that we done while we are

just like doing our MVP, which
kind of gives you, and I don't

maintain either of them by the way.

So News Sketch and I one py, Google
News, like is basically like a, like

RSS feed documentation of Google News,
which I had to like hack around myself

'cause there was like no documentation.

So basically Google News has r ss feed
and it doesn't have documentation.

There's like a lot of parameters that
I had to like, kind of deduct and try

to like, just hard, like try one after
another one to see what is actually

exists, what works, what doesn't work.

And another thing, we actually
have free access for researchers.

We have a bunch of research papers.

I think the most interesting is
one of the recent one by Berkeley

where they see how well LLM can
forecast the future using like news.

And they use our, our API there.

So that's like an interesting one.

So yeah, if you are like a researcher,
if you're a student and you wanna mess

around with like news and that's going
to be your research, just go to us.

We have free access for researchers and
we are really proud that we, that we do

that and like, yeah, we, for example,
also help to big nonprofit organizations,

NGOs, like we should, I dunno, like, so
we sign that we have like, we're gonna

help Transparency International, catching
all the news coverage about corruption

and briberies and stuff like that.

So there's like a lot of
cool stuff we do for free.

Mike Bifulco: I love that.

I think it's really an important thing
to have some access to folks who can

benefit from your product, who never
could afford it, and that it speaks a

lot to what you've built and certainly
the value that you've provided for

your customers that you can, you know,
in some way subsidize people who are

doing research and things like that.

Artem, I'll make sure to, to reach
out to you and grab links to the

research papers that you mentioned.

'cause I think that'd be something that'd
be one fascinating to read through and

I'm sure listeners would like to get to.

But I think it may also give some
indication for some of the folks who

listen the sorts of projects that might
be interesting for people to pursue if

they're looking at news catcher or if they
might be a good fit as a user of yours.

I'm curious then.

For the folks in the audience listening,
how would they know that news catcher

might be something that they should
explore as a use case for their company?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Gosh, that's a, that's a great, that's

a great thing to, that we actually
don't know answer yet really well.

But, so globally, what I say is like is,
is every industry has really different

things like, some industries have to like
do adverse media checks, for example.

You know, like you open a bank
account, they probably need to run

like an adverse, like check that.

Like there's no news about you doing
like, I don't know what, but, and there

are some companies that just like can
benefit and sometimes they just like don't

know what they like, it, it just like,
they use too much manual time for that.

So what usually I try to say
to everyone is like, look,

if there is, like if you can.

If there are any news that are happening
either locally or globally or in other

countries, whatever it is on your
industry that you, you know, like your

business can directly benefit from.

For example, I don't know, like we have
companies who like sales intelligence,

they say like, like, look, we just need to
know where, when our customers raise more

money, open new business or something like
that, and they say, we do it manually.

We lose a lot of time on this.

As long as you can like articulate clearly
what kind of news you have and like, as

long as you can say like what kind of
answers you need from each news article,

we basically gonna make sure that you kind
of receive those at the right kind of,

at the right time, at the right place.

And a lot of people just
like don't know how.

A lot of stuff is possible.

Like even one, one of my latest
discoveries, like, like financial like,

or like where people invest money.

We have customer right now with like
private equity in real estate and

they wanna know if there's like any.

Transport, public transportation
infrastructure expansion going like,

if, you know, like, if there's like
a bus station opening somewhere,

like the prices of the multifamily
apartments gonna go up there.

So they want to know that.

And there's like hundreds of those
news, like every day, for example,

or like a financial institution.

They not always invest in Apple
and Microsoft or Palantir.

Sometimes they buy bonds from like.

Hospitals and universities and
schools, and they kind of need to

know local news about the schools,
like if everything is happening there,

if they're gonna fail on this bond.

And there's like a lot of those stuff
where kind of, I guess people know that

like there are news and they just like.

Don't know how to scale it or they
just never thought that they could do.

And so we kind of try to help those
that like figure out that there was

like something in the news that is
like important to their business and

they come to us and we try to like
make sure that like we integrate it

like into their existing workforce,
into the systems perfectly.

.
Mike Bifulco: The summary I'm hearing
perhaps is that if you, if your

business or your strategy is swayed by.

Signals in the news and, and
you want to trigger some sort of

reporting or workflows or decision
making or whatever it may be.

This is a good use case for plugging
in the news catcher and trying

to listen to the, the broad swath
of places where news can come

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Yeah, and I, and I would say, I would

say like the only thing is like, it
doesn't have to be some, like we work

with some like Foresight Trends team.

It can be that, but it's
usually like much, much more.

Specific, but which is still for some
kind of, you know, companies is like,

you know, like a hundred million dollars
line of business that gets like affected

by small news every day and they just
like do, don't do anything about that.

And so just by changing this, just
like a slightest beat can, can save

you millions of dollars every year.

Mike Bifulco: Well, Artem
thank you so much for joining.

Before I let you go, I have a couple
of important questions for you.

First of all, are you hiring, are you
guys looking for anyone at the moment?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah,
we kind of always hiring right now.

So we are looking for, I think right
now we're gonna look for two positions.

We just hired a first technical like
kind of account executives and we're

gonna probably look for one more, so I.

What I'm trying to do, like we do, like I
said, a lot of like bespoke integrations.

So you need to be
really, really technical.

You need to, you're not gonna
have a sales engineer with you.

You are actually gonna have to
understand like how things work.

You need to understand like customer
problems and try to like come up

with some smart solutions and things.

So we are looking for technical account
executive, AKA, the closer, the guy

who, who actually does the sale.

And then we probably gonna look
for very first, like LLM AI

engineer slash data scientist,
I dunno how you call them today.

We do a lot of like, so basically we do
a bunch of like fine tuning and stuff.

We do really basic things.

Surprisingly they work and
probably right now it's the time

for us to take it more seriously.

So, I don't know if you are
passionate about AI and LLMs, we

know, I cannot promise you like
a million dollar Nvidia cluster.

, actually, I can promise we're not
gonna have that, but we can deliver

something like zero to one with just.

Little resources, but , measure the
output, and just, you know, we have a

lot of, you know, one thing I learned
is like working with enterprises, really

few of them actually need this, like
a hundred millisecond latency stuff.

Some of them can wait
day or like 15 minutes.

You can do a lot of right now with LMS,
if you have like 15 minutes windows.

So yeah, we are looking for like,
for a great like AI engineer.

We don't have those posts together.

Probably by the time this podcast is live.

You can, you can kind of apply.

Yeah.

We are looking, we are looking for, and
yeah, we mostly, I'm sorry for folks

in the US who I think like the majority
of the crowd, but we must likely need

someone to work around the European
time zone as we are all in, in Europe.

Yeah.

.
Mike Bifulco: Amazing.

Artem, of course.

, I'll throw those in the links to any job
openings you have in the description here.

The other thing I wanted to ask,
and I don't actually think we've

said it out loud on the podcast yet
news Catcher, what's your website?

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Yeah, it's news catcher api.com.

Mike Bifulco: Love it.

And where's the best place for
people to find you if they're

looking to chat with you?

Artem.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO): Yeah.

If you are ever in Warsaw, Poland.

Please, like really reach out to me.

I don't have, like, it's not,
not that many people here I know.

So I'd be happy to ask you
out for a coffee or something.

Mike Bifulco: Cool.

, that's amazing.

I would hope that people
take you up on that.

I've heard Warsaw's an amazing place too.

I'd, I'd love to visit sometime.

Artem, thanks so much for
joining, . I really appreciate it.

It's been fantastic chatting with
you and , what an interesting

product journey you've had.

Anytime you're you're interested in coming
back on the show, we'd love to have you.

Thanks so much for joining.

Artem Bugara (NewsCatcher, CEO):
Thanks a lot.

Thanks

Mike Bifulco: All right.

Take care.