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        Microsoft Cultivating More AI Startups with Azure Program Expansion   
        
        
        
        A Microsoft program that grants thousands in Azure credits to AI-forward startups is becoming more accessible. 
As of this week, the Microsoft for Startups Founders Hub is newly open to these incubator organizations: theAI  Grant Fund, Alchemist  Accelerator, Conviction, The House Fund, Open AI Startup Fund, Neo and AI investor Elad Gil. This represents a major expansion since the program's launch  back in November, when it just provided free Azure AI resources  for Y Combinator and M12 startups (M12 is Microsoft's venture capital  funding organization).
The Microsoft for Startups Founders Hub program dangles "up  to $150,000 in Azure credits for use toward Azure AI Studio" for startup  companies leveraging AI. The program also offers tooling support, "tailored  GPU virtual machine clusters," AI models as a service, plus one-on-one meetings  with experts. There are eligibility requirements, though. 
To be eligible for the program, startups must be: 
  - Building a software based product or service
- Privately held and for-profit
- Pre-Series D or privately funded
- Have not previously received more than $10,000 in Azure credits.
Such program details can be found at this sign-up page. 
While the $150,000 in free Azure credits sounds like a good  deal, not every program participant will get them. The Microsoft for Startups  Founders Hub is actually a tiered benefits program, based on four levels ("Ideate,  Develop, Grow, and Scale") at which Microsoft assesses the  program's candidates. The benefits for Level 1 candidates (Ideate) aren't  described. Level 2 candidates (Develop) get $5,000 total Azure credits, while  Level 3 candidates (Grow) get $25,000 total Azure credits. It's just the Level  4 candidates (Scale) that are eligible for top credits under the program. Microsoft  explains these nuances at this  page.
Microsoft also has an extension to its Startups Founders Hub  program, which is known as the Microsoft for Startups Pegasus program. It  specifically offers help to "select B2B startups" that are working  with companies.
"Seventy-five percent of Pegasus startups have landed  deals with Fortune 1000 companies via increased reach across Azure Marketplace,"  Microsoft indicated in its November announcement.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.