Nas.com Raises $27M Series A to Build an AI Platform for the Solopreneur Economy
Funding Details
$27M
Series A
Nuseir Yassin did not stumble into this market. He earned it the long way, one story at a time, across 64 countries, building an audience that now clocks in at 70M and counting. By the time the views crossed 30B, the signal was obvious. Talent is everywhere. Infrastructure is not. So instead of telling more stories about the gap, he decided to close it.
Nas.com just pulled in $27M in Series A funding, led by Vinod Khosla and Nicole Fraenkel at Khosla Ventures, with 500 Global in the mix and a lineup of operators who know how to print outcomes. Shuo Wang, Stanley Tang, Scott Adelson, Tim Ferriss. That is not a cap table, that is a table where execution gets discussed in verbs, not vibes.
Let’s talk about what they are actually betting on. Not creators. Not influencers. Solopreneurs. The quiet majority. The 20,000+ business owners on the platform, over 90% running solo, no staff, no safety net, just leverage. And Nas.com hands them leverage like it is oxygen. Upload a product, get a storefront. Describe an idea, get a business plan. Type a sentence, launch a campaign. It is less “build a company” and more “press play.”
Alex Dwek, running operations with the kind of discipline you only get from living inside the numbers, is helping scale a system that already hit 5x revenue growth in 2025, jumping from $1M to $8M while 3.5M people across 150+ countries started buying from businesses that probably did not exist a year earlier. That is not growth, that is compression. Time, cost, friction all getting squeezed until only signal is left.
The pricing tells its own story. $29/month. Not because it is cheap, but because everything else is expensive. Stitch together tools, hire freelancers, burn time, burn cash. Or let the system handle the heavy lifting while you focus on the one thing that actually matters. Selling something people want.
Khosla called it a company that could not have existed 5 years ago and will feel inevitable 5 years from now. That is a polite way of saying the ground is moving and most people are still checking their shoes.
Nas.com is not building stores. It is building operators. And operators, when given the right tools, tend to get very loud very fast.









