Let’s talk about the silent killers of business growth, those endless approval chains, SOPs written like ancient scripts, and teams burning hours making the same calls day after day. Automation promised a cure, but it always came with a catch: you still needed engineers to babysit the bots. Then Logic showed up. This Seattle startup built an AI platform that lets biz teams automate decisions in plain English, no code, no dependencies, no excuses. On Oct 20, 2025, Logic announced a $4.3M seed round led by Founders’ Co-op, joined by Audacious Ventures, Neo, Dan Lewis, and a roster of current and former Brex execs. Not bad for a 4-person crew running out of Pioneer Square with more horsepower than companies ten times their size.
CEO and Co-founder Steve Krenzel and CTO and Co-founder Jess Garms aren’t new to the arena; they’ve built, scaled, and sold before. Krenzel’s path runs through Brex, Convoy, Twitter, Salesforce (which acquired his first startup, Thinkfuse), and even Microsoft. Garms has led teams at Lyft and Twitter, co-founded Banter with Krenzel (sold to Convoy), and turned hard lessons into sharper systems. Together, they’ve seen the same bottleneck, great ideas stuck waiting on engineering queues. Logic’s fix? Strip the friction. Let domain experts write what they know, and watch the system spin it into APIs, web apps, or integrations, live in seconds.
The results speak louder than hype. Logic has automated over 2M decisions and handles more than 200K each month across ecommerce, fintech, logistics, and public safety. One client, Garmentory, cut moderation lag from 7 days to 48 seconds, dropping its price floor from $50 to $15 and unlocking its best financial quarter ever. That’s not just speed, that’s compounding intelligence.
Founders’ Co-op GP Aviel Ginzburg said it straight: “LLMs are powerful, but making them useful beyond info retrieval is the challenge.” Logic cracked that. Their platform runs with under 2% error rate, full SOC 2 Type II compliance, version control, and audit trails baked in. It’s not a demo toy; it’s production-grade reliability at enterprise scale.
Krenzel summed it up: Logic wants to be “the repository of all your business logic,” turning docs into APIs in seconds. This isn’t about teaching AI to think; it’s about teaching companies to stop waiting.

