How a Simple Academic Tool Became an Acquired Startup

How a Simple Academic Tool Became an Acquired Startup

Author: Acquire.com February 24, 2026 Duration: 7:02

Ovi Shekh didn’t set out to build a startup. Wisdomic AI began as a practical response to an academic challenge, where literature review work demanded time, structure, and careful organization.


The first version was intentionally simple. While the tool solved a real workflow problem, it also revealed early limits. Rather than stopping there, Ovi rebuilt the tool as a web product, expanding its reach beyond the classroom.


Early traction quickly changed the trajectory. Adoption grew through academic networks, attracting roughly 1,900 users and later drawing interest from universities and research groups. Still, growth inside the fast-moving AI landscape introduced pressure, uncertainty, and new constraints.


Eventually, the journey led to a successful acquisition on ⁠Acquire.com⁠.


You’ll hear:

  • How an academic tool gained real users
  • Why early traction reshaped the opportunity
  • The challenges of building in the AI space
  • What made selling the rational decision
  • How buyer alignment influenced the exit


3 Lessons from Wisdomic AI

  1. Validation Can Start Small: Real problems inside familiar environments can accelerate product adoption.
  2. Traction Changes Everything: Early usage can transform a simple tool into a credible software asset.
  3. Selling Can Be Strategic: Timing, focus, and fit often matter more than scale alone.


For founders building side projects, micro-SaaS tools, or niche AI products, this episode offers a clear perspective on traction, growth realities, and acquisition decisions.


Follow the guest:

⁠LinkedIn⁠

X (Twitter)

Wisdomic AI⁠


Behind every successful startup acquisition, there's a story-a complex mix of strategy, emotion, and paperwork that rarely gets discussed openly. Startup Acquisition Stories, from the team at Acquire.com, pulls back the curtain on those real-world transactions. Each episode features founders and entrepreneurs who have personally navigated the process of selling or buying a business through their platform. You'll hear them recount the nuanced decisions that don't make it into press releases: the challenging conversations around valuation, the subtle art of vetting the opposite party, and the critical, often overlooked, steps after the handshake. This podcast digs into the practicalities of due diligence, structuring terms, and managing the transfer of assets, all the way through to escrow and the crucial post-deal transition. It’s a grounded, detail-oriented look at the mechanics of a business exit or expansion, straight from the people who’ve lived it. For anyone curious about the actual path to a deal, beyond the theory, this series offers a rare archive of lived experience and hard-won advice.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Startup Acquisition Stories
Podcast Episodes
Are You Selling an Asset or Selling a Job? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:40
If Ian Fourie could give two pieces of advice to founders selling their SaaS startups, he’d say: Register your business in only one country Start pushing founder responsibilities to employees as soon as you canIan sold h…
How Gabby Rosen Flipped a Newsletter for 18x in Under a Year [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 16:12
What does it take to sell a startup for almost 20 times what you paid for it?Gabriella (Gabby) Rosen says it comes down to three things:Having an unfair advantage when you buyListing on Acquire.com for slightly less than…
Want to Build an Agency Worth Buying? Spend a Decade Saying Yes [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 29:23
While working full-time as a pharmaceutical sales rep, Bobby Dimovski noticed that medical professionals were: Always looking for new ways to grow their business. Usually 10 years behind on marketing trends. Hard to acce…
Look For This When Acquiring Startups, It Could Triple the Resale [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 12:07
After building and selling one of the first ChatGPT plagiarism checkers on the market in 2024, Tomer Tarsky decided to search Acquire.com for another project in the edtech AI space. He found a promising business, grew it…
Turning Your Weakest Skill into an Acquire’d Startup [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 16:58
Are you a developer who’s bad at email marketing? Ironically, you may be in a great position to build the next big email marketing tool. Onur Genes wanted to promote his software development agency but couldn’t write goo…