Back in June, I penned a story on our Industrial IoT News site about Vecna Robotics. (Read it in full here.)
As I wrote over the summer, “Vecna robots make your business go.” That’s their tagline, in a sense. Vecna Robotics is a company that remains dedicated to carving a future where highly adaptable, material-handling robots capably do what many would define as “the dirty work” of a given job, thereby creating ample opportunities for people themselves to perform higher-priority duties for their respective businesses.
Since the company’s inception, Vecna Robotics has been quote-unquote “obsessed” with intelligent industrial workforce solutions; namely, those that streamline autonomous workflows and transformational efficiencies that follow. Trusted by the likes of Caterpillar, FedEx, John Deere and Petco (i.e. with robotics that yield big-time ROIs in approximately “one year or less”), Vecna Robotics is all about the advancement of quality-ensuring machines that preserve workers’ time and safety while optimizing cost-saving measures along the way.
In my aforementioned article, we talked about how Vecna Robotics had then closed a successful Series C funding round at $100 million. The official announcement had stated that the funding would be used “to fund new workflow-specific innovations that enable the company to deliver rapid ROI to cost-conscious operators.” (The company also brought in a new COO at the time, too; Michael Helmbrecht joined Vecna’s ranks with 20+ years of experience, keen on overseeing its manufacturing operations, IT and more in order to continue meeting customer-defined performance guarantees.)
We’ve got another Vecna-related joint announcement; again, one part funding round, one part leadership change-up, equal parts follow-up to their Series C + Helmbrecht update.
Vecna Robotics recently announced the closing of a $14.5 million funding round led by existing investors, as well as the appointment of Karl Iagnemma as its new CEO.
Regarding the funding, the company stated that it’s being earmarked to “accelerate future product enhancements that address the automation needs of operators in automotive, general manufacturing, and high-volume warehousing.”
Regarding the new CEO, Iagnemma is an entrepreneur and robotics expert with, quote, “a distinguished career blending academic research and industry leadership.” Iagnemma co-founded and served as CEO of autonomous vehicle technology company nuTonomy, which was later acquired by Aptiv in 2017 for $450 million. Iagnemma also has 50+ issued or pending patents and previously directed a robotic mobility-focused research laboratory at MIT (News - Alert), where he authored publications related to robotics and AI that have since been cited reportedly “more than 20,000 times.” (And MIT is where he met Daniel Theobold, the founder of Vecna Robotics.)
And that’s how we loop back to his presence that’s now being felt at the company.
“Automation in logistics today is similar to the current state of robotaxis, in that there is a massive market opportunity but little market penetration,” Iagnemma explained. “I join Vecna Robotics at an inflection point in the material handling market, where operators are poised to adopt automation at scale.”
Iagnemma went on to add how “Vecna is uniquely positioned to shape the market with state-of-the-art technology and products that are easy to purchase, deploy, and operate reliably across many different workplace environments.”
Vecna Robotics is sure to remain on our radar as more developments follow.
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