SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Reading: ‘The hustle factor is real’: Why this fast-growing Seattle startup is packing its bags for Palo Alto
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > News > ‘The hustle factor is real’: Why this fast-growing Seattle startup is packing its bags for Palo Alto
News

‘The hustle factor is real’: Why this fast-growing Seattle startup is packing its bags for Palo Alto

News Room
Last updated: August 6, 2025 8:18 pm
News Room
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE
Nectar Social co-founders and sisters Misbah Uraizee (left) and Farah Uraizee. (Nectar Social Photo)

Misbah Uraizee and Farah Uraizee want to win. And they believe their best shot at success lies in Silicon Valley, not Seattle.

The co-founders of Nectar Social, fresh off a $10.6 million funding round, are moving their AI-powered social commerce startup to Palo Alto, Calif.

The decision came down to three main factors: proximity to customers and early adopters, co-locating employees, and accessing specialized talent.

“This wasn’t about leaving Seattle — it was about giving Nectar the best possible chance to define a new category,” Misbah Uraziee told GeekWire. “Sometimes that means being where the game is being played at the highest level.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​”

Speed was also a consideration.

“The hustle factor is real,” Misbah said via email. “Right now in the Valley, teams are working six, seven days a week because they understand this is a unique moment in technology history. That intensity — that sense of ‘we have to win this market NOW’ — is harder to cultivate in Seattle where the pace, even at startups, tends to mirror the steadier rhythms of the big tech companies.”

Nectar’s departure echoes themes highlighted in our story last week about the state of Seattle’s startup scene amid a wave of AI-fueled transformation.

The presence of tech giants like Amazon and Microsoft — along with Meta, Google, and others with large engineering centers in the Seattle region — has helped attract world-class talent.

Misbah previously worked at Microsoft, Meta, and X in the Seattle area before launching Nectar Social in 2023. Farah spent nearly five years at Meta in Seattle.

But that talent doesn’t always translate into startup activity.

Seattle’s startup ecosystem has “matured tremendously,” Misbah said, but she pointed to a “cultural gap around early-stage risk appetite.”

“The talent pool — particularly from Amazon and Microsoft — tends to gravitate toward later stage companies with more predictable trajectories,” she said. “For a seed/Series A company doing something new especially in social, the talent pool isn’t it large as you’d expect.”

Nectar is building AI tools to help brands engage consumers on social media through personalized, direct conversations. Revenue has grown 5X in the past two months, according to the company.

Uraizee said Seattle excels in cloud infrastructure and AI research, but the Valley offers stronger depth in go-to-market functions, product marketing, and design — especially from people who’ve shipped AI products at scale.

RELATED STORY

Can Seattle own the AI era? We asked 20 investors and founders to weigh the city’s startup potential

Asked what she’d add to the Seattle startup scene, Misbah said the city would benefit from celebrating risk-taking and more diversity within the investor ecosystem.

Nectar raised from one Seattle firm, Flying Fish, but other backers are in Silicon Valley or elsewhere. “Seattle VCs tend to pattern-match on enterprise SaaS and biotech,” Misbah said.

She also called for more support infrastructure for early stage startups — such as shared spaces, angel investors, and advisory networks.

“Most importantly, Seattle needs to embrace the idea that some companies need to operate at Valley-speed to win their markets,” she said. “That’s not a judgment on work-life balance — it’s recognition that certain opportunities have expiration dates. If the ecosystem could support both sustainable growth companies AND these sprint-mode ventures, more founders would stay.”

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Interlune will team up with Astrolab to send a camera to the moon for helium-3 survey

IBM Plans Large-Scale Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer by 2029

Zillow revenue up 15% to $655M as mortgage and rentals business drive growth

Fresh off $37.5M round, Augmodo’s vision for spatial computing inside retail stores sharpens

Titan sub investigators blame OceanGate for safety lapses and say fatal disaster was ‘preventable’

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

AI

How generative AI impacts your brain – Computerworld

August 11, 2025
Games

Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for August 11 (#1514)

August 11, 2025
Games

Much anticipated Persona-like RPG Demonschool finally has a release date

August 11, 2025
Games

This asynchronous autobattler is like Backpack Battles meets FTL

August 11, 2025
Games

D&D’s new Forgotten Realms books come with Astarion-themed digital DLC

August 10, 2025
Games

One of the first ever American videogame magazines is now available online for free

August 10, 2025

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?