FOMO.11: From West Coast to Iran, Kosovo and Oulu
Carmen organised a hackathon in United States, Alejandro analysed the impacts of war, and Liina dived into all-male founding teams.
Hope you are celebrating the long weekend with your families and loved ones. We certainly are. Before escaping for a weekend in Oulu, we ran some amazing columnists’ stories on topics ranging from startup culture to the impact of the war in Iran on startups.




Although we are focusing on Estonia, we also shared a few more stories from around the world — a bit like a glimpse of foreign news in local newspapers.
I met Chris Cunningham, one of the first members of ClickUp, to get a glimpse of the backstory of this Silicon Valley unicorn. We met a few hours before his speech at TechChill the other week, and, listening to him on stage later, presenting the social media strategies for 2026, I thought back to the interview and realised we had not even mentioned marketing and advertising a word during our discussion.

Fiona wrote up the story of the 14-year-old edtech founder from Kosovo, who is already creating some nice FOMO on social media.

FUNDING
Turkish-founded, Estonia-registered, life sciences compliance startup Validfor has raised $1.2 million in a pre-seed round led by DOMiNO Ventures, to modernise validation processes across pharma, biotech, and medtech.
More locally, Pickmybrain.com, a Tallinn-based startup building AI-powered digital “brains” for celebrities, experts, and public figures, raised a €1.8 million pre-seed round to fuel its growth.
MOVES
Former Beamline and Prototron CEO Jana Budkovskaja joined BSV Ventures as a Partner, becoming part of a tiny tribe of Estonian female partners at venture funds.
The new EstBAN board now includes Lauri Antalainen, Jan Lätt, Martin Gorosko, Jana Budkovskaja, Olga Lustsik, Aleksander Tõnnisson, and Peeter P. Mõtsküla. Lauri, Jan, and Martin were elected for another term, and Peeter is a new board member. EstBAN awarded Jana the “Lead Investor of the Year” title.
Sergei Anikin (ex-Pipedrive) left Bolt after running their engineering for just 5 months and set up his own AI consultancy Kodulabor.ai.




