
Astra, an AI-powered sales technology startup backed by Perplexity AI founder Aravind Srinivas, shut down in late July 2025, just four months after raising a funding round. CEO Supreet Hegde cited “disagreements with cofounders” as the primary reason for the shutdown, but the closure highlights broader challenges facing AI startups in India.
What Happened to Astra
Astra was building AI tools to automate sales workflows. The startup had secured backing from Aravind Srinivas, who runs one of the most prominent AI companies in the world right now. That kind of endorsement usually opens doors for additional funding and hiring.
Instead, the company folded within a quarter of its funding round. According to CEO Supreet Hegde, internal disagreements about the company’s direction and product strategy made it impossible to continue. The specifics of these disagreements haven’t been made public, but the speed of the collapse suggests deep misalignment between the founding team.
India’s AI Funding Landscape in 2025
The Astra shutdown comes against a backdrop of conflicting signals in India’s AI startup ecosystem. On one hand, overall funding has been strong. India’s startup ecosystem saw over $11 billion in funding in 2025, with AI-related companies capturing a growing share of that capital.
On the other hand, individual AI startups are struggling with fundamental business model questions:
- Revenue vs. hype: Many AI startups raised funding based on technology demonstrations but couldn’t convert those into paying customers at the pace investors expected.
- Talent wars: Experienced AI engineers and ML researchers command premium salaries. Startups competing against Google, Microsoft, and Amazon for talent face brutal compensation pressure.
- GPU costs: Training and inference costs for AI models remain high. Startups without significant revenue burn through runway fast.
- Market timing: The AI hype cycle created expectations for growth that many startups couldn’t meet within their funding timelines.
Other AI Startup Activity in India
Not every AI startup in India is struggling. Arivihan, an AI education technology startup, is in talks to raise $10-12 million from Accel and Prosus. The company’s focus on the education market, where willingness to pay for quality tools is well-established, gives it a more predictable revenue path than many pure-AI startups.
Netrasemi, a semiconductor startup developing the A2000 chip, is moving toward production-readiness as part of India’s push to build domestic chip design capabilities. The company represents a different category of AI-adjacent startup that benefits from government incentives and India’s growing hardware ecosystem.
The broader data shows that while total funding dropped 17% globally in 2025 to $10.5 billion, Indian AI startups bucked the trend. AI-focused companies in India saw increased investor interest, particularly in B2B SaaS, healthcare AI, and fintech applications.
What This Means for AI Startups
The Astra closure is a reminder that celebrity backing and a hot technology category don’t guarantee survival. Several patterns are emerging among AI startups that succeed:
- Specific, measurable value: Startups that can point to concrete ROI for customers (saved hours, reduced costs, increased revenue) are raising and retaining funding more easily.
- Clear unit economics: Investors are increasingly asking for realistic paths to profitability, not just growth metrics.
- Team stability: Cofounder conflicts are a leading cause of startup failure. The Astra situation is a textbook example of what happens when the founding team can’t align.
- Market timing: Startups building for markets where AI adoption is already happening (developer tools, customer support, content generation) have an easier path than those trying to create new AI-first markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Astra shut down?
CEO Supreet Hegde cited disagreements with cofounders about the company’s direction and product strategy. The specific details of these disagreements were not publicly disclosed.
How much funding did Astra raise before shutting down?
Astra raised an undisclosed amount from investors including Perplexity AI founder Aravind Srinivas. The exact funding amount was not made public before the shutdown.
Is India’s AI startup ecosystem struggling?
Mixed results. Total funding remains strong at over $11 billion in 2025, and Indian AI startups attracted increased investor interest. However, individual startups face challenges with revenue generation, talent costs, and GPU infrastructure expenses.
Which Indian AI startups are doing well?
Arivihan (AI education) is raising $10-12 million from Accel and Prosus. Netrasemi (semiconductor) is nearing production. B2B SaaS companies using AI for specific business workflows are generally performing better than pure AI research startups.
What should AI startup founders focus on in 2025?
Concrete measurable value for customers, realistic unit economics, team alignment, and targeting markets where AI adoption is already happening rather than creating entirely new categories.
