By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Times CatalogTimes CatalogTimes Catalog
  • Home
  • Tech
    • Google
    • Microsoft
    • YouTube
    • Twitter
  • News
  • How To
  • Bookmarks
Search
Technology
  • Meta
Others
  • Apple
  • WhatsApp
  • Elon Musk
  • Threads
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy and Disclaimer
© 2025 Times Catalog
Reading: Alma co-founder had such a bad immigration experience she founded a legal AI startup to fix it
Share
Notification
Stay Tuned! Check back later for the latest updates.
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Times CatalogTimes Catalog
Search
  • News
  • How To
  • Tech
    • AI
    • Apple
    • Microsoft
    • Google
    • ChatGPT
    • Gemini
    • YouTube
    • Twitter
  • Coming Soon
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy and Disclaimer
© 2025 Times Catalog
Times Catalog > Blog > Tech > AI > Alma co-founder had such a bad immigration experience she founded a legal AI startup to fix it
AINews

Alma co-founder had such a bad immigration experience she founded a legal AI startup to fix it

Usama
Last updated: July 11, 2024 4:13 pm
Usama
Share
4 Min Read
Alma co-founder had such a bad immigration experience she founded a legal AI startup to fix it
SHARE

When Aizada Marat relocated from New York to California in 2018 with her husband, KODIF co-founder and CEO Chyngyz Dzhumanazarov, she anticipated a smooth transition. However, the journey to sort out her immigration status quickly turned into a nightmare.

Marat, a Harvard-educated attorney born in Kyrgyzstan, initially came to the U.S. at 17 for an exchange year through the U.S. State Department’s Future Leaders Exchange (FLEX) program. After graduating from Harvard, she moved to London due to immigration issues. Now, she was moving to California with Dzhumanazarov, who had been admitted to Stanford Business School, while she had a job offer from the leading law firm Cooley.

Unbeknownst to her, the world of immigration law can be a minefield. A simple Google search led her to a lawyer in Palo Alto, a decision that would cost her dearly. The lawyer’s incorrect advice about her work authorization timeline left Marat unable to work for over a year and confined to the country.

“I’m a lawyer, so I listen to what lawyers say,” Marat told TechCrunch. “Unfortunately, listening to them was devastating because months later, I was still unable to work. I had a job offer from Cooley.”

Despite these setbacks, Marat eventually secured her position at Cooley for three years. She confronted the immigration law firm about their mistake, which ignited an entrepreneurial fire within her. This experience led her to question why immigration legal services were so fragmented and often of poor quality.

Alma co-founder had such a bad immigration experience she founded a legal AI startup to fix it

Immigration law, she discovered, is highly fragmented. About 10% of the market is dominated by one law firm, while over 20,000 firms share the remaining 90%.

“Very few big law firms offer immigration services because they primarily serve individuals, and those are small checks,” Marat explained. “To get a talent visa, most people can self-petition without needing an employer. In my case, Cooley wouldn’t sponsor visas, so I had to navigate it myself.”

Determined to prevent others from experiencing similar hardships, Marat founded Alma, an AI-powered legal tech startup, in October 2023. She teamed up with fellow immigrants, including former Uber engineering manager Shuo Chen and former Step project manager Assel Tuleubayeva. Alma aims to simplify the visa process for technologists, founders, and researchers by providing personal legal advisors, speeding up document processing, and digitally organizing the entire process.

Unlike competitors such as Migrun, Boundless, and Lawfully, Alma offers more comprehensive services, including employing its own immigration attorney. “Immigrants deserve high-quality services because so much depends on the immigration attorney that you find,” Marat said. “We automate the repetitive and mundane tasks that lawyers hate, allowing them to focus on providing effective strategies to achieve higher approval rates.”

Alma’s mission is bolstered by $5.1 million in combined seed and pre-seed funding from backers including Bling Capital, Forerunner, Village Global, NFX, Conviction, MVP, NEA, and Silkroad Innovation Hub. The funds will primarily support new hires in product and technology development.

With Alma, Marat is turning her personal ordeal into a powerful tool to ensure that no one else has to face the same struggles she did.

You Might Also Like

Logitech’s MX Creative Console now supports Figma and Adobe Lightroom

Samsung resumes its troubled One UI 7 rollout

Google Messages starts rolling out sensitive content warnings for nude images

Vivo wants its new smartphone to replace your camera

Uber users can now earn miles with Delta Air Lines

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp Copy Link
What do you think?
Love0
Happy0
Sad0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Previous Article Defense AI startup Helsing raises $487M Series C, plans Baltic expansion to combat Russian threat Defense AI startup Helsing raises $487M Series C, plans Baltic expansion to combat Russian threat
Next Article EU ends Apple Pay antitrust probe with binding commitments to open up contactless payments EU ends Apple Pay antitrust probe with binding commitments to open up contactless payments
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

144FollowersLike
23FollowersFollow
237FollowersPin
19FollowersFollow

Latest News

Pinterest is prompting teens to close the app at school
Pinterest is prompting teens to close the app at school
News Tech April 22, 2025
ChatGPT search is growing quickly in Europe, OpenAI data suggests
ChatGPT search is growing quickly in Europe, OpenAI data suggests
AI ChatGPT OpenAI April 22, 2025
social-media-is-not-wholly-terrible-for-teen-mental-health-study-says
Social media is not wholly terrible for teen mental health, study says
News April 22, 2025
Google is trying to get college students hooked on AI with a free year of Gemini Advanced
Google is trying to get college students hooked on AI with a free year of Gemini Advanced
AI Gemini Google Tech April 19, 2025
Times CatalogTimes Catalog
Follow US
© 2025 Times Catalog
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy and Disclaimer
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?