Danilo Limoeiro: Breaking the shackles of the traditional tax system with Turivius
With the aim to do something good for the small companies in
his home country Brazil, Danilo Limoeiro, Co-founder and CEO of Turivius, is
transforming the traditional tax system with the help of AI and machine
learning. The root cause of the problem is a labyrinthine set of tax norms and
unpredictable tax enforcement. Norms are numerous, unclear, and conflicting
among themselves. As a result, taxpayers and government officials file more
than a million tax lawsuits against each other per year in Brazilian courts.
Thus, he and his team are harnessing the power of AI and machine learning to
bring this revolution.
Climbing the ladder of success
Before becoming an entrepreneur, Danilo was preparing for
his Ph.D. at MIT, and he had also done his Master’s degree in Oxford. He
acquired his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in
Politics of Bureaucracy and simultaneously upskilled himself with advanced
Machine Learning methods.
He criticized Brazil by saying that it had a terrible tax
law system. He states, “When I was growing up in Brazil, my parents had a small
business, which we lived of. The red tape for small businesses in Brazil is one
of the worst in the world. So, most of the small business owners in developing
countries face a double-challenge: running the business and navigating the
bureaucracy.”
During his time at MIT, he realized that AI could make a
huge impact in decreasing the red tape in developing countries. So, he saw a
big opportunity to apply all the knowledge he acquired at MIT to solve the big
problem in his country. This marked the advent of Turivius.
Pressure matters till one learn something from it
Working on a brand new and foolproof idea in a business can
be a daring situation, and addressing obstacles is just one part of
accomplishing that objective. Danilo and his team faced the most ordinary
startup issue that was raising funds for their business, but that part was
additionally challenging as Brazil did not have as many investors as in the US
to ask for capital. However, they strategized calmly and overcame the
issue.
A good entrepreneur learns from his mistakes rather than
forgetting them. He states, “The lesson I learned was: don’t be too dependent
on external money and learn how to keep your startup as close to the breakeven
point as possible. The jockey-stick curve can be tricky, so developing a
frugality culture can be life-saving for early-stage startups like mine.”
Transforming the industry with Turivius
He shares the hot potato in Brazil was the complex nature of
the tax system. It takes an average firm in the country ten times longer to
process taxes than an average firm elsewhere. He states, “What Turivius does is
to radically reduce the cost of tax compliance by using artificial intelligence
to guide tax compliance and decrease risk by predicting patterns of enforcement
and litigation outcomes. Such a solution is useful for lawyers, accountants,
and in-house counselors across several industries.”
Danilo and his team try to look at the competition mostly as
a source of knowledge for how they can better serve their clients.
He adds, “Besides the usual channels, I’m talking to my
customers all the time. I think this is actually the best way to take the
temperature of the market. We try not to be too obsessed with the competition.
Yes, we should always be on the lookout for what this or that company is doing,
who are building cool products with great technology, many of which can
actually inspire us. However, the most important thing is really the client,
not the competition.”
The team has the aim to become a leader in the market of
AI-powered software in Latin America. To fulfill this, he states, “Our current
focus is on producing solutions for the legal sector, but we do plan to expand
our products towards accountants and HR professionals. On the one hand,
AI-powered technologies have the unimaginable potential for impact. On the
other hand, companies of all sizes face huge challenges in developing
countries. We want to be the company that will create AI-powered software that
will help these companies succeed.”
Life as the Co-founder and CEO of the company
Danilo believes that in the early stages of a growing
startup, the CEO has to oversee most parts of the company. Before he could grow
his team, he had split his time between the roles of product manager,
salesperson, marketer, and CFO.
He further states, “In 2020, Turivius grew ten-fold, and
that was great. So, it was as if every month or two, I had a different job,
running a different company. In one month, I was recording and editing videos
for our inbound marketing strategy. Next month I was hiring the sales team that
would deal with the new flow of prospects in our website. That’s actually the
most exciting part of my job!”
He aims at creating a fun environment at work to keep
himself and his team motivated. He adds, “It is easy to lose sight of the Big
Dream when you are focused on the everyday task. So, my job is also to make
sure that people actually enjoy themselves while working and to constantly
remind them of the big dream!”
When it comes to achieving balance on the professional and
personal front, he makes time for his family and friends. With that, he
indulges in sports to have fun and learn new things.
Future stepping stones for the company
Danilo and his team want to spend the next four years
focused on the Brazilian market. Brazil is a very large country, so it is
possible to build a big business here.
Currently, they are aiming at building technologies for the
legal sector. He expresses that there are two paths to extend their services on
the global level. He states, “The first is to start with other large Latin
American countries that have the same legal system as in Brazil, i.e., civil
law. The second is to expand to the US market that has a different legal system
but is highly attractive. Turivius could be highly competitive in the US market
because in terms of costs, the exchange rates could really favor us. And, in
terms of quality, we actually showed our product to some Miami-based legal
firms; who provided a very good feedback on how our product could be competive
compared to what is available in the US market. So, that’s another possibility
for the future. “