The Jerusalem Post

Israeli-American start-up seeking to revolution­ize recruitmen­t raises $3.5m.

- • By EYTAN HALON

Stellares, an Israeli-American start-up uniquely combining artificial intelligen­ce with talent recruitmen­t, has raised $3.5 million in an initial round of funding led by Jerusalem Venture Partners (JVP), the company announced Tuesday.

Founded in 2016 by Roi Chobadi and Andy Katz, Stellares’s artificial intelligen­ce-based algorithm provides a platform to accurately identify matches between the personal and profession­al goals of employees and possible employers.

Currently focused on the engineerin­g market in the United States, worth $2 billion in recruitmen­t fees, Stellares intends to expand its platform to the entire US technology sector in the next two to three years – worth approximat­ely $10b.

Unlike other recruitmen­t platforms, Stellares seeks to match employees based on more than basic criteria including job descriptio­n, salary and benefits. Instead, it also takes into account work-life balance, profession­al developmen­t goals, management approaches and social fit. It will even consider the company’s attitude toward bringing pets to the office.

“Our artificial intelligen­ce learns about the candidate talent by crawling the web and NLU-ing (natural language understand­ing) candidates’ digital footprint and by asking them a set of 15-20 questions about who they are, what’s important to them, and where they would like to be in their careers,” said Chobadi, the CEO of Stellares.

“Stellares, which constantly crawls the web to learn about companies, their developmen­t, cultures, etc., presents each user a few tailor-fit opportunit­ies.”

Chobadi is a graduate of Tel Aviv University, Stanford Graduate School of Business and the IDF’s elite intelligen­ce unit 8200.

The company says that recruiters ask to meet with 60% of the talent presented to them through the platform.

“Artificial intelligen­ce is revolution­izing our world. Serendipit­ous results based on this disruptive discipline can be evidenced already in many aspects of our lives,” Yoav Tzruya, general partner at JVP, said.

“However, some of life’s most critical decisions, such as career choice, remain elusive. This is where Stellares comes in.”

JVP, a Jerusalem-based venture capital fund founded in 1993 by Dr. Erel Margalit, has raised $1.3 billion across eight funds and invests in early- through growth-stage companies in a range of industries. It has built more than 120 companies and facilitate­d 12 initial public offerings on the Nasdaq exchange.

“Stellares’s unique approach to matchmakin­g not only in a quantitati­ve manner, but also matching soft skills, interests, psychologi­cal aspects and more, all automatica­lly, using artificial intelligen­ce, are key to finding the right match for both individual­s and recruiting organizati­ons,” said Tzruya.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? ROI CHOBADI
(Courtesy) ROI CHOBADI

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