Ramdam scores every video ad with AI before you spend the budget – 50K creators across 50 countries, with predicted performance upfront.
ENTRY ANGLES
Human-AI collaboration platforms for content creation that amplify human capability · AI-powered personalization, practice, and feedback systems for educational content
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI systems for pattern recognition and performance analytics, Human-AI collaboration interface design, Personalization and feedback at scale
YOU NEED ADS THAT ACTUALLY SELL.
“You don't just need ads”
"You don't just need ads – you need ads that actually sell." That's roughly the pitch behind Ramdam.
The startup's thesis: the key to effective advertising is combining influencer-created content with AI that helps structure briefs and evaluate results.
To execute on that, Ramdam built a marketplace with 50,000 influencers across Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok in 50 countries – all available to produce video ads on demand.
AI is embedded in every step of the workflow:
- The advertiser describes the product and the key messages they want to communicate to the platform's AI engine.
- The AI drafts a detailed creative brief, which the advertiser posts as a project on the marketplace.
- Creators submit proposals describing how they'd approach the brief. The AI analyzes each proposal alongside the creator's past work and assigns a ranking.
- The advertiser selects creators based on their own judgment and the AI rankings.
- Creators submit their videos. The AI reviews each one and generates editorial feedback. The advertiser sends revision notes back to creators, optionally incorporating the AI's suggestions.
- The advertiser receives revised videos and approves them.
Once a creator's proposal is approved, they have 24 hours to sign the contract and 3 days to submit a first cut. Payment is held in escrow until delivery.
Advertisers can request two rounds of revisions. If the video still doesn't meet the brief after that, they can file a dispute. Ramdam's team reviews it, and if the video genuinely misses the brief or falls below quality standards, the payment is refunded.
Pricing is set upfront by the AI based on brief complexity, creator experience, and audience size – removing the need for back-and-forth negotiation. Individual videos range from $60 to $700, with an average around $200. The minimum order size is $2,000, which can cover multiple videos and/or multiple creators.
Orders can include distribution in the creator's account or just delivery of the raw asset for the advertiser to use independently. The license covers distribution on any platform for one year.
Ramdam claims its platform-sourced videos perform 80% better than content from standard freelance platforms.
Founded in France, Ramdam started as a mobile app – which took off after a TikTok campaign. But building that campaign was a frustrating experience for the founders, which led them to create an automated platform for the process. The platform launched in early 2023, and Ramdam has now raised $3.15M to grow it.
Professional ad agencies produce technically slicker work, often with recognizable talent in front of the camera. The problem is that slick no longer converts.
90% of consumers find user-generated content more persuasive than brand-produced content. So brands are reallocating creative budget away from polished agency work and toward UGC-style production.
The deeper reason isn't cost – it's authenticity. Real people in real situations with real imperfections are believable. That believability transfers to the brand. And Gen Z, in particular, treats authenticity as a core value, which means this shift in advertising preference isn't going away.
Catch+Release – [covered here](/review/oni-perestanut-sozdavat-ty-nachnjosh-nahodit) – raised over $30M (with a new round of undisclosed size closed in February) on a catalog of existing user content available for brands to license. Its framing: "Sex sells" has become "People are imperfect. Imperfection sells." Imperfection, of course, is just another word for authenticity.
So the first insight is straightforward: modern advertising shouldn't be polished – it should be authentic. Ordinary instead of glamorous. Genuine instead of performed. Explanatory instead of persuasive.
But why does Ramdam lean so heavily on AI for briefs, rankings, and feedback?
Because, as someone once quipped: "The secret to success is sincerity. Once you can fake that, you've got it made."
In other words, authenticity has a craft to it. And most people – including experts – miss the subtle signals that make content feel real versus performed.
ViralMoment – [covered here](/review/ono-v-jetom-godu-vzorvjotsja) – raised $2.5M on the premise that even professional social media analysts miss the emerging patterns that make TikTok videos go viral. Its AI tracks and deconstructs trending content to extract the replicable ingredients.
MagicBrief – [covered here](/review/kreativami-nado-zanimatsja-a-ne-nastrojkami) – raised $2M for a platform where advertisers save and analyze videos – their own and others they find online – using an AI engine that tries to reverse-engineer what makes them work.
Ramdam's bet is that AI can apply the same kind of pattern recognition to brief-setting and video evaluation – helping advertisers extract better work from creators than they'd get through a standard freelance platform. If the 80% performance claim holds up, that bet is already paying off.
The general principle Ramdam demonstrates is that humans working with AI consistently outperform humans working alone or AI operating independently.
Here, creators bring human creativity and lived authenticity; AI contributes analytical attention to the subtle patterns that drive performance – things creators themselves might not consciously control. That human-AI collaboration is part of the broader creator economy, which has grown to roughly $2 trillion and is still expanding.
Some creators insist their competitive advantage lies in working without AI. Technologists counter that AI will eventually produce all content autonomously. The actual answer sits somewhere between – the best content will come from genuine human-AI collaboration, where humans contribute creativity and AI handles the details that humans miss but that can make or break the result. This dynamic is playing out across every corner of the creator economy, not just ad production.
The opportunity: build platforms and tools that help people create better content by working with AI – not around it or instead of it. Platforms where AI amplifies human capability rather than replacing it.
The segment most ripe for this model beyond ad production is long-form educational content – courses, coaching programs, professional certification prep – where human expertise is the product but AI can handle personalization, practice, and feedback at scale. The instructor provides irreplaceable depth; AI handles the surface that benefits from infinite patience and always-on availability.