Robotics companies face a common but complex challenge: the sheer volume of data generated by robots. A single robot can easily produce up to a terabyte of data every day due to constant data capturing from cameras and sensors.
Based in Sydney, Australia, Alloy aims to tackle this challenge. The startup is developing a comprehensive data infrastructure tailored for robotics companies, enabling them to efficiently process and manage the extensive data collected from various sensors and cameras.
Alloy’s core functionality revolves around encoding and labeling the data it gathers, granting users the capability to search through this data using natural language. This feature not only assists in identifying bugs and errors but also allows users to establish rules for future anomaly detection, similar to how software observability tools monitor and flag code errors.
Joe Harris, founder and CEO of Alloy, shared with TechCrunch, “Currently, the process involves identifying anomalies and replaying the data triggers long hours of manual scrutiny. Users struggle to determine if a flagged issue has historical precedence, its severity, or if it’s just an isolated incident.”
As the volume of data generated by individual robots continues to escalate, Harris emphasized, the data management challenge will only grow for businesses looking to scale.
Harris’s fascination with robotics started at a young age. However, upon graduating in 2018, he found limited opportunities in the field. He subsequently took on various roles within Australian tech firms, including positions at Atlassian and the telehealth company Eucalyptus.
In 2024, he decided it was time to launch a robotics venture. Initially, he planned to focus on agricultural robots, driven by his interest in vertical farming. Yet, during discussions with fellow founders, the recurring theme of managing robot-generated data emerged. Recognizing this gap, he pivoted to address that need first.
“By solving this problem for my robotics company, I knew I could build a universally applicable solution,” Harris stated. “My immediate mission is to empower other robotics enterprises to minimize the time spent on data logistics, allowing them to focus on achieving high reliability.”
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Since launching in February 2025, Alloy has successfully partnered with four Australian robotics companies as design collaborators, with plans to expand into the U.S. market this year.
“Our most enthusiastic clients are those who have experienced the difficulties of building and maintaining data systems independently,” Harris noted. “They would prefer an excellent tool—akin to Databricks, but specifically tailored for robotics.”
Alloy has raised over AUD $4.5 million (approximately $3 million USD) in a pre-seed funding round led by Blackbird Ventures, alongside investments from Airtree Ventures, Xtal Ventures, and Skip Capital, plus contributions from angel investors associated with robotics firms.
Currently, Alloy faces minimal direct competition. Many robotics companies rely on adapting existing data management systems not designed for the diverse data generated by robots or are attempting to create their bespoke internal tools.
As commercial applications of robotics continue to expand, Alloy aims to capture a substantial segment of the burgeoning market.
“Never has there been a better moment to establish a robotics company. I aspire to facilitate the emergence of the next 10,000 or even 100,000 robotics ventures that are yet to materialize, enabling them to avoid redundantly reinventing the wheel like so many before them,” concluded Harris.
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