Warehouse-reliant businesses are changing how they order and store inventory to accommodate shifting consumer demands, material shortages, and geopolitical uncertainty. Keeping up with these new strategies requires a level of visibility and efficiency that historically low-tech warehouses just don’t have.
Until Mytra came along.
Founded by former Tesla engineers Chris Walti and Ahmad B., Mytra looked at the problem differently from previous warehouse automation tools. Instead of developing a point solution for one of many workflows within a warehouse, they focused on the core part of every industrial environment: moving materials from one place to another (especially when you don’t have enough humans — or humanoids — to do it).
“To really make a difference in warehouses, you have to stop thinking in 2D,” says Baitalmal. “You only have to walk around a 100,000-square foot warehouse once to see that these are 3D problems requiring 3D solutions.”
Co-Founded in partnership with Eclipse Venture Equity, Mytra emerged out of stealth last summer with an AI-powered, robotic system that effectively turns every pallet of material in a warehouse into its own intelligent, efficient, and extremely strong elevator of sorts — and it’s making a big impact on its early customers.
So, how did they do it? In a new feature, we took a look at Mytra’s vision, the technology’s impact on the warehouse floor today, and how the team aims to become the leading provider of vertically integrated software and hardware for many industrial environments in the future: https://bit.ly/4h8ygUM