Amit Choudhary

Amit Choudhary is the co-founder and CTO of Huzzle, an Indian-born software engineer who has led the platform's technical development from founding to over 100,000 student users across UK universities.
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Amit Choudhary is the co-founder and CTO of Huzzle, a London-based early careers platform used by over 100,000 students across UK universities. Of Indian heritage, Choudhary studied Computer Science at Maharaja Agrasen Institute of Technology in Delhi, graduating in 2014 before building a software engineering career across a series of venture-backed startups in India and the UK.

Choudhary began his career as a software developer, gaining experience across companies including VinSol, PSTakeCare, Unbxd Inc, and BigBinary, where he developed deep expertise in Ruby on Rails and full-stack engineering. He rose to become Chief Technology Officer at hundred, an online education platform, where he led the engineering team from February 2018 to December 2020 — building his leadership capabilities and experience in scaling technology products in fast-growth startup environments.

In November 2020, Choudhary co-founded Huzzle alongside Parham Rakhshanfar and Ingmar Klein, bringing the technical architecture and engineering leadership needed to build the platform from the ground up. As CTO, he has been responsible for all technology decisions at Huzzle — from the initial product build through to the development of AI-powered job matching and career management features that have since become core to the platform's differentiation. His technical leadership has enabled Huzzle to scale to over 100,000 users and integrate with thousands of UK employers.

In 2024, Huzzle raised £1.4 million to develop the platform further and expand its coverage across UK universities and employers. Choudhary's engineering foundation and product instincts have been central to Huzzle's ability to solve a genuinely hard problem: building a job discovery experience that works for students rather than experienced professionals, at a time when early career outcomes are increasingly shaped by access to technology and networks.

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