Justin Wenig remembers his days at Y Combinator in 2019.
Back then, he was working with his first startup, Coursedog, which looked to provide more modern tools to higher educational facilities, including those that work with state departments. He learned quickly that his peers didn’t like working with the public sector — too much bureaucracy.
Even finding out basic information, like what a school district purchased in the past year, required a lot of paperwork.
“Out of hundreds of startups, only a handful of us were trying to modernize how government and education worked,” Wenig told TechCrunc
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