The Good Tech Companies - How Bestfriends Anamika Bhoyrul and Tawishi Jain Are Building the Future of Social Connection
Episode Date: November 20, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-bestfriends-anamika-bhoyrul-and-tawishi-jain-are-building-the-future-of-social-connection. ... Two best friends, Anamika Bhoyrul and Tawishi Jain, are building Six Social—an AI platform reinventing how Gen Z forms meaningful connections through mutual int Check more stories related to programming at: https://hackernoon.com/c/programming. You can also check exclusive content about #six-social-app, #gen-z-social-networking, #ai-social-graph, #anamika-bhoyrul, #tawishi-jain, #social-connection-platform, #mutual-introductions, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @jonstojanjournalist. Learn more about this writer by checking @jonstojanjournalist's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. After meeting through a random Twitter intro, founders Anamika Bhoyrul and Tawishi Jain created Six Social—an AI-powered platform acting as “social memory” for Gen Z. What began as viral social graph parties evolved into a mobile app that helps users find relevant connections instantly. With 1,000+ intros made and major partnerships secured, Six Social is gearing up for national expansion.
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How best friends Anamika Boy Rule and Toishi Jane are building the future of social connection.
By John Stoyan journalist.
When Anamica Boy Rule and Toishi Jane met through a mutual friend on Twitter last year,
neither could have predicted that random introduction would become the foundation of a startup revolutionizing how Gen Z connects.
That single connection changed their lives and sparked an obsession with one question.
Why do the most meaningful relationships happen so randomly? Today, the duo has turned that question
into six social, an AI-powered platform that's facilitated over 1,000 introductions across
four major cities and secured partnerships with Y Combinator AI Startup School, Lovable, and Flight
City. Boy Rule's journey to startup founder took an unexpected turn. After graduating from the London
School of Economics with a law degree and qualifying for the New York Bar, she made a decision that
surprised many, she walked away from a big law career to build six social. Jane took an equally
unconventional path, turning down lucrative big tech offerstow focus full time on the startup
while pursuing engineering studies at Columbia. Neither of us are employed in the traditional sense,
Boyrule explains. We essentially chose the unconventional route to build a startup instead of going
corporate. The two complement each other perfectly. Jane handles the technical side,
coding the algorithms that power six social social graphing technology.
Boyral brings legal expertise and business strategy, but more importantly, their best friends
building something together. Their first experiment was audacious.
Create an Instagram group chat with 100 strangers connected through mutual friends,
invite them to a house party, and map everyone's social connections on a massive wall display.
The pitch was simple. Come to our party, and we promise your name will be mapped on the walto someone
else you might like, or we'll buy you a drink. The social graph parties became a phenomenon.
Word spread rapidly across social media, and suddenly companies and brands wanted in. The algorithm
attracted serious commercial interest, including from Thursday dating, which explored licensing
the technology for deployment across more than 100 cities. We were going to license our algorithm to even
bigger companies, Jane recalls. But then we realized there was a fundamental problem. Events don't scale when
when IT comes to this technology. That insight prompted the pivot to six social as a mobile platform.
After extensive market research and building a substantial waitlist, they've now completed
beta testing and are ready for national expansion. The problem six social addresses is deeply
personal. Both founders have experienced the awkwardness of scrolling through thousands of
Instagram followers or LinkedIn connections, trying to remember who might be able to help with a
specific need. You follow thousands of people on Instagram. You have massive
linked in connections, Boy Rule explains. But when you're in San Francisco and need a place to stay,
you're like, who do I know? It's cringe and embarrassing to cold DM someone for a favor. Six social's
AI chatbot solves this by functioning as social memory. For general Z users can ask questions in natural
language like, who do I know at NYU, or who likes Japanese fashion. The platform then opens a group
chat between the user and their mutual connection, explaining shared interests and why they should connect.
Investors have started comparing six social to professional CRM platforms, but boy rule is quick to
differentiate. We're that, but we're social. Instead of asking for professional favors or
career networking, we help you in your day-to-day casual life. Like, who can I grab coffee with
today? The founders envisioned six social becoming as ubiquitous as Uber, a default APP that people
open whenever they have a social need. Their immediate focus IS expansion across college campuses
nationwide, starting with successful tests at universities in New York. We took dating into our own
hands when dating apps were created, Boyrule reflects. What about connections in general? Why should
valuable introductions through mutual friends still depend on random fate instead of intentional
technology? For two best friends who met through exactly that kind of random introduction,
building technology to make those connections less random feels like destiny. The waitlist is now
open at six social app.com. Thank you for listening to
this Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence. Visit hackernoon.com to read, write,
learn and publish.
