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He Said No to $300K: 16-Year-Old Now Runs His Own AI Company

Last updated: March 24, 2026 2:22 am
The Editorial Desk
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Evion AI agriculture startup
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The teen chose education over a lucrative offer and built a startup.

At an age when most students are still exploring academic interests, Rudrojas Kunvar faced a defining choice early in his journey.

When a venture capital firm offered $300,000 to leave school and focus entirely on his startup, he declined and instead continued his education while building his business in parallel.

In doing so, he adopted a deliberate approach, prioritizing long-term control and purpose over rapid growth driven by external pressure.

Building Evion Around a Real-World Problem

To begin with, Kunvar founded Evion, an artificial intelligence-based platform designed to help farmers analyze crop health using aerial images captured by standard camera drones.

He developed the idea after interacting with farmers in his local community, where he observed that many still rely on experience and estimation to detect early signs of crop stress or disease.

To address this, Evion converts drone imagery into structured crop health maps, enabling farmers to identify areas that require targeted intervention, such as irrigation or fertilization. As a result, the system reduces resource wastage while improving decision-making at the field level.

Reducing the Cost Barrier in Agricultural Technology

Equally important, Evion focuses on accessibility. Traditional agricultural drone solutions often rely on expensive multispectral cameras and specialized hardware, limiting adoption among small and mid-sized farms.

Instead, Kunvar designed a system that works with widely available, lower-cost camera drones, shifting the value proposition toward software rather than hardware.

Consequently, this approach lowers entry barriers significantly, allowing a broader segment of farmers to benefit from precision agriculture tools without substantial upfront investment.

From Concept to Early Adoption

After developing the initial version of the platform, Kunvar partnered with collaborators experienced in building technology products to expand its reach. Instead of relying on conventional marketing, he drove early growth through partnerships with agricultural organizations and networks that provided direct access to farmers.

As a result, Evion has begun to see adoption across multiple regions, including North America, Southeast Asia, and India, indicating early validation of both the product and its distribution strategy.

Balancing Education and Entrepreneurship

At the same time, Kunvar’s decision to continue his education while building the company reflects a broader view of entrepreneurship as a long-term process rather than an immediate outcome. By maintaining academic continuity, he retains the flexibility to refine both his technical understanding and business approach while scaling the startup in a measured way.

A Broader Signal for AI Innovation

More broadly, the development of Evion highlights a wider shift in how artificial intelligence is being applied across industries. Rather than focusing solely on high-visibility sectors, new founders are increasingly targeting practical challenges in areas such as agriculture, where efficiency gains can deliver direct economic and environmental impact.

In this context, Kunvar’s approach underscores the growing role of accessible AI solutions in transforming traditional industries, particularly when innovation aligns closely with real-world constraints and user needs.

Rudrojas Kunvar built Evion, an AI farm tool, while in high school. 

Source: BI

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