Inside AWS’s Global Accelerator for the Generative AI Era
Can cloud credits create unicorns? AWS thinks so—and it's betting big on generative AI startups.
Last December, I sat inside the theatre at the Venetian Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, the home of world-famous magician Shin Lim. Only, I’m not there to see a sleight-of-hand spectacle—I’m there to watch the inaugural “Unicorn Tank,” a startup pitch competition put on by Amazon Web Services (AWS) held during its re:Invent conference.
For two hours, eight startups told their stories and shared their innovations in front of hundreds of attendees and a panel of five noted investors. These companies were part of AWS' most recent global Generative AI Accelerator (GAIA) cohort and were vying for a $100,000 prize. While not predominantly AI-first, these startups showcased how they’re building next-generation businesses with gen AI.
The eight hailed “from every part of the globe and covered diverse fields, including hospitality, sustainability, content, gaming, audio, and even security,” Tiffany Bloomquist, AWS' head of startups and general manager for Asia Pacific and Japan, explained. “Unicorn Tank” marked the spectacular grand finale of a ten-week program these startups just completed.
Disclosure: I attended Amazon's 2024 re:Invent as a guest of the company, which paid a portion of my travel expenses. That said, Amazon did not influence the contents of this post. These thoughts are entirely my own.
In a separate media briefing, she cited external research estimating that generative AI already contributes over $98 billion to the global GDP. To help grow that impact, AWS is backing startups it sees as “changing the course of technology.” “We are investing in these startups to ensure that they are achieving their full potential,” Bloomquist remarked. “We believe that they will be the enterprises and the largest software companies of the future, and it’s our job to help them on their journey.”
And while Silicon Valley remains a key hub for tech and AI innovation, she noted that new hotspots are gaining traction around the world, in cities like London, Paris, Berlin, Sydney, Seoul, Tokyo, and in parts of India, Brazil, and Mexico. “This is a global phenomenon, and we are investing globally to support startups from around the world,” Bloomquist said.
How AWS Is Shaping Gen AI Support for Startups
As AWS gears up for its GAIA’s third season, let’s dive deeper into why the company established this program to begin with. It shouldn’t be a surprise, as it has long championed startups—it’s one of the first to support entrepreneurs by issuing grants of cloud credits. Now, it’s doubling down on AI. In June 2024, AWS pledged $230 million (primarily in credits) to help AI startups accelerate development and deployment. Six months later, it followed up with a $1 billion commitment in cloud credits.
Naturally, these credit incentives will entice founders to build on AWS, creating opportunities to leverage the platform’s AI offerings, such as its Nova models and Bedrock. But what else does AWS gain by giving away cloud credits and not taking on a more financial stake in these startups?
“Our goal is [that] you never know where the next amazing startup will come from, and so we want to have as broad a net as we can cast. You never know what amazing partnerships will come from these conversations. We want to keep creating unique ways that startups can connect and get their message out,” Bloomquist told me on the sidelines of re:Invent.
Designing a Program That Scales Globally
She explained that AWS offers various programs to support early-stage companies, regardless of their level of growth. “There’s not one program because you need things that are done locally. You need things that are done at a geo level. You need things that are across time zones, and you need things that are done globally.” In addition to GAIA, AWS also operates similar accelerators across the four major geographic regions: North America, Asia Pacific and Japan (APJ), Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), and Latin America (LATAM).
The advantage of GAIA, Bloomquist pointed out, is the caliber of exposure and access compared to local and regional initiatives. While local accelerators can focus on fostering connections with nearby enterprises and ecosystems, GAIA is suited to elevate a startup’s visibility and expand networks across borders.
“At the global level, the level of exposure that you have means a lot,” she stated, citing the example of AI Hay, a Vietnamese AI answer engine startup from the ASEAN region. Bloomquist highlighted that through GAIA, the company not only received access to significantly more cloud credits than it would have through its local program, but also to potential investors and peer founders from around the world. AWS believes this type of global positioning could help startups advance partnerships and sharpen their value propositions on an international scale.
Why Visibility Matters at the Global Level
Bloomquist stated that her team received over 4,000 applications for GAIA’s second cohort, with 80 startups ultimately accepted, with an equal number coming from each region. “It was important for us when we ran this program at a worldwide level to ensure that there was a diversity of involvement from a variety of different startups from around the world,” she said.
With $230 million on the line, AWS had to design its selection process for startup applicants carefully. According to Bloomquist, a subset of the most promising applications made it to interviews and underwent both business and technical evaluations. Among the factors her team looked for: “Did the founder(s) have a compelling story and a unique situation that sparked them to create this business opportunity? How effective were they at actually talking about the unique product-market fit that they had and why they felt that would be successful? Was the technical solution one that we felt also, over time, would be able to scale and grow with a fit for purpose?” In other words, AWS wanted startups that it felt were best suited to maximize the benefits GAIA’s program provided.
Growing Momentum
Still, Bloomquist acknowledged the challenges of the selection process, such as having to turn away “fantastic businesses that are going to be highly successful” simply because the timing wasn’t right. Even so, AWS' efforts have already yielded at least one notable outcome: Leonardo.ai, a generative AI content and research startup from the original 20-company cohort, was acquired by Canva last year. Building on that momentum, AWS is expanding the number of startups it supports through GAIA. It has quadrupled in size in its second year, and with its new $1 billion commitment, that figure could now grow significantly.
“We are now at a stage where virtually all startups will be applying generative AI to their business in one shape or form,” Jon Jones, AWS' vice president and global head of startups, wrote in a statement. He adds that for GAIA’s third year, the program will focus on startups “developing the foundational technologies that will define what’s possible with AI.”
AWS doesn’t take any equity from any of the startups participating in its gen AI accelerators. The companies receive credits through AWS Activate, a program that provides the resources needed to build, launch, and scale on the cloud computing platform. No contract needs to be signed. Bloomquist reminded me that GAIA “isn’t about us getting a percentage of their business. It’s actually about us investing in them so they can experiment on the platform and really build and grow a business in those early stages that enable them to use our services to really light up the applications and the ideas that they want to build.”
Are Credits Better Than Money for Startups?
At its core, GAIA functions much like other startup accelerators, but with one key distinction. While the program invited founders to Seattle to collaborate with the AWS team and fellow cohort members, and provided mentorship and networking support, what it doesn’t do is offer cash investment or take any equity in return. In a way, AWS may view cloud credits as being more beneficial to startups at this point than an infusion of capital.
Bloomquist responded by saying AWS credits are an “incredibly useful lever for startups to be able to access our tools, see what models work for them, understand how they can build a more cost-effective solution than simply having maybe a couple of servers under their desk in the garage that they had as limitations for how they want to build.” She called it a “fundamental” program that is enabling a “democratization of access to technology to all startups that want to invest in this space.”'
For many early-stage startups, especially those building AI-driven products, access to infrastructure can be more valuable than receiving a cash infusion. Being granted cloud credits allows entrepreneurs to scale their compute-intensive operations quickly, experiment with models, and iterate efficiently without burning through their already limited runway. Moreover, unlike cash, these credits are directly tied to building and deploying the product, making them advantageous for startups seeking flexibility and technical depth when starting.
Now Accepting Applications
Startups interested in participating in AWS' third GAIA cohort can apply now through July 10. Selected companies will be announced in late September. However, unlike past years, it appears the program will be more abbreviated—the cohort size has been cut in half to 40 startups and will run for eight weeks, down from the ten weeks last year.
As Jones stated, for 2025, AWS is looking for companies that are “developing generative AI technologies, including building models, infrastructure, fine-tuning tools, and agentic workflows.” Startups will receive up to $1 million in AWS credits, technical guidance, mentorship, go-to-market support, and access to AWS' generative AI technology.
This year’s GAIA will start with an in-person launch at Amazon’s headquarters in Seattle and conclude once again at AWS re:Invent in December.
Don’t Miss out on Future Issues of ‘The AI Economy’
This Week’s AI News
🏭 AI Trends and Industry Impact
AI coding tools upend the “buy versus build” software equation and threaten the SaaS business model (Business Insider)
Small businesses are using AI, but not spending much (Axios)
Pope Leo takes on AI as a potential threat to humanity (The Wall Street Journal)
🤖 AI Models and Technologies
MIT scientists have devised a way for LLMs to keep learning (Wired)
Midjourney releases first AI video generation model (VentureBeat)
Can you choose an AI model that harms the planet less? (The New York Times)
Google launches production-ready Gemini 2.5 AI models to challenge OpenAI’s enterprise dominance (VentureBeat)
MiniMax-M1 is a new open-source model with 1 million token context and new, hyper-efficient reinforcement learning (VentureBeat)
✏️ Generative AI and Content Creation
We uncovered how Meta’s AI app was full of accidental public posts that were really personal. It’s now trying to fix that. (Business Insider)
AI residencies are trying to change the conversation around artificial art (The Verge)
Adobe launches Firefly mobile app, adds AI models from Ideogram, Pika, Luma, and Runway (My Two Cents)
Google tests Audio Overviews for Search queries (TechCrunch)
💰 Funding and Investments
AI autonomous agents are top 2025 trend for seed investment (Crunchbase News)
Vibe coding fever: Solo entrepreneur’s Base44 acquired by Wix for $80 million (CTech)
Self-driving startup Applied Intuition nets $15 billion valuation (Axios)
Multiplier, founded by ex-Stripe exec, nabs $27.5 million to fuel AI-powered accounting roll-ups (TechCrunch)
AI wildfire detection startup Pano AI raises $44 million (The Wall Street Journal)
Nabla lands $70 million to build AI agents in healthcare settings (Crunchbase News)
☁️ Enterprise AI Solutions
OpenAI open-sourced a new customer service agent framework (VentureBeat)
Salesforce study warns against rushing LLMs into CRM workflows without guardrails (CIO)
Salesforce increases prices as it promotes new AI features (Bloomberg)
How can you make sure your brand shows up in LLM search? Adobe’s new LLM Optimizer seeks to provide the tools (VentureBeat)
Anysphere launches a $200 monthly Cursor AI coding subscription (TechCrunch)
Qodo teams with Google Cloud to provide developers with free AI code review tools directly within the platform (VentureBeat)
⚙️ Hardware, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems
💼 Business, Marketing, Media, and Consumer Applications
Amazon expects to cut corporate jobs as it relies more on AI (NBC News)
Meta tried to buy Ilya Sutskever’s $32 billion AI startup, but is now planning to hire its CEO (CNBC)
AI could lead to more job cuts at BT, says chief executive (The Guardian)
Scale AI rivals see customer demand surge after Meta investment (Bloomberg)
Meta’s Advantage+ adds generative AI tools for advertisers and agencies (Adweek)
TikTok launches new AI tools for advertisers, including AI avatars for video ads (Mashable)
For some in the industry, AI filmmaking is already becoming mainstream (NBC News)
🛒 Retail and Commerce
Amazon builds an AI shopping agent strategy (The Information)
⚖️ Legal, Regulatory, and Ethical Issues
Creators say they didn’t know Google uses YouTube to train AI (CNBC)
California is trying to regulate AI giants—again (The Verge)
BBC threatens Perplexity with a lawsuit over content scraping concerns (Deadline)
Mastodon updates terms of service to prohibit AI model training (TechCrunch)
Revealed: Thousands of UK university students caught cheating using AI (The Guardian)
New York passes bill to prevent AI-fueled disasters (TechCrunch)
💥 Disruption, Misinformation, and Risks
AI scraping bots are breaking open libraries, archives, and museums (404 Media)
Can AI identify safety threats in schools? One district wants to try. (The Washington Post)
It’s pretty easy to get DeepSeek to talk dirty (MIT Technology Review)
ChatGPT may be eroding critical thinking skills, according to a new MIT study (TIME)
WormGPT returns: New malicious AI variants built on Grok and Mixtral uncovered (CSO)
🔎 Opinions, Analysis, and Editorials
Why AI hardware needs to be open (MIT Technology Review)
Why Apple must buy Perplexity (Big Technology)
Beyond the perfect prompt: The definitive guide to context-engineering—the next revolution in AI (Nate’s Notebook)