In a world where people chase trends, Yash Singhal followed a problem. Not because it was fashionable. But because it was real.
Born and raised in Noida, Yash didn’t grow up dreaming of changing the legal world. He just loved solving problems. As a kid, he was the one who’d take apart gadgets just to understand how they worked. Quiet, curious, and always building something—even if it was just in his head.
He never aimed for the spotlight. But today, 400+ companies, including Fortune 500 giants, use the product he built: CaseDocker.
Where It All Began: A World on Pause, a Mind on Fire
In 2020, when the world shut down, Yash saw something most didn’t.
Legal teams especially in big enterprises and law firms were struggling to function remotely. Documents were stuck in drawers. Teams were scattered. Compliance, litigation, contracts everything was a mess.
Yash wasn’t even from the legal world. But he understood systems. And he saw one that was clearly broken.
So he started building. Not a flashy app. Not a pitch deck. A solution.
That solution became CaseDocker an AI-powered legal workdesk where everything a legal team needs lives in one place. Litigation, contracts, compliances, notices, documents all docked under one digital roof.
No Big Funding. No Buzzwords. Just Work.
Yash didn’t raise millions. He bootstrapped CaseDocker from scratch under Coingeit, keeping his focus razor-sharp:
“Let’s build something that actually works.”
No vanity metrics. Just clients, results, and real-world impact.
And it worked. Slowly. Then all at once.
CaseDocker started picking up clients—from startups to sector leaders in energy, IT, transport, and finance.
Today, it powers the legal operations of hundreds of organizations, cutting contract cycle times by up to 60%.
From Genesis Global School to Georgia Tech
Before all of this, Yash was just a kid who loved tech. He studied at Genesis Global School in Noida, then moved to the U.S. to pursue Computer Science at Georgia Tech—earning a perfect 4.0 GPA in both his BS and MS (Machine Learning).
But he wasn’t just a bookworm. He joined Create-X, mentored fellow students, became a Startup Lab TA, and started shaping his identity—not just as a coder, but as a builder, a mentor, and soon, a founder.
The Quiet Grind
Entrepreneurship wasn’t easy. Yash talks openly about the financial struggles in the early days—tight budgets, long nights, hard choices. But he believed in the long game.
He listened to clients. Tweaked the product. Kept going “I didn’t want to build something cool. I wanted to build something useful.” That mindset—of clarity and patience—is why CaseDocker didn’t just survive. It grew.
Giving Back: Mentoring the Next Wave
Even while building his own company, Yash never stopped teaching.
He’s now a Startup Mentor at Georgia Tech’s Create-X, a judge at K-12 InVenture Prize, and a speaker for programs like Technology Entrepreneurship ECE 6001.
He doesn’t believe in gatekeeping. If someone’s trying to build, he’s there to help.
What Yash Believes
Ask him what drives him, and he’ll say:
“Innovation thrives at the intersection of necessity and creativity.”
That’s the code he lives by. Build for a real need. And then dream bigger.