The professional networking landscape, long dominated by LinkedIn's sprawling feeds and often performative public personas, is facing a new challenger. Today marks the SuperMe launch, an "AI-native professional network" that promises to fundamentally change how we access expert advice by turning real work into conversational AI profiles. Co-founder and CEO Casey Winters, a veteran of growth engines at Pinterest and Eventbrite, announced the platform's 1.0 release alongside a $6.8 million seed round led by Greylock.
SuperMe's core premise is straightforward: ask a question, and the platform finds relevant professionals whose AI profiles instantly provide answers, grounded in their actual work. This isn't just another AI assistant spitting out generic information; it's designed to deliver "Perspective Search," offering multiple viewpoints from people who have genuinely tackled similar problems. The idea is to replicate how advice truly works in business, through diverse, experienced human perspectives, albeit mediated by AI.
Winters highlights a critical gap in the evolving search landscape. While AI assistants offer instant answers, they often obscure the human knowledge behind them, losing the crucial context and individual perspectives that make advice valuable. SuperMe aims to bridge this by making the expertise of professionals "legible to LLMs" without forcing them into constant public self-promotion. Instead of curating a public feed, professionals contribute their talks, writing, and notes, which SuperMe then uses to build a multimodal AI representation. Users can query these profiles via voice or text, and the professionals themselves can review and refine the AI's answers, further solidifying their expertise.
