Soft infrastructure for robotics. Built in America.

Land your robots in America.

Compliance, certification, channel, and an authorized local service arm. Neutral, U.S.-based, no robots of our own to sell.

20,000+imported service robots at work in the U.S.
26-50%install-base CAGR to 2030
2-8 wkstypical cross-border repair downtime
~$112M2030 U.S. service market

The gap

Robots aren’t the bottleneck.

Tens of thousands of imported robots already work in the U.S., and the number is climbing fast. The hardware is rarely the problem. What strands otherwise-good machines is everything around it.

/ compliance

Pulled from market

No local compliance and certification path (NDAA, UL, FCC), and the product can be blocked or quietly de-listed.

/ service

Weeks in the dark

No authorized local service, so a fault becomes a cross-border RMA. Warranties break and machines sit idle for weeks.

/ trust

Won’t sign

An American buyer who doesn’t trust the support behind a robot won’t buy it, and won’t keep it.

Service one · get in

The U.S. landing program.

Your robots, legally into the U.S. market and in front of buyers. Project-based, prepaid, weeks not years. No American entity required on your side.

Fixed-scope · starts with a 2-3 week diagnostic

  • AssessA fixed-fee diagnostic: NDAA exposure, the certification path for your category, and the honest go / no-go.
  • CertifyUL, FCC, and the standards your category needs, managed end to end so the product clears and stays cleared.
  • ChannelDistribution, local partners, and the go-to-market motion to actually reach buyers, not just be importable.
  • LandA clean handoff into market, with the local-support story buyers need to sign and to stay.

Service two · stay running

Authorized after-sales service.

We become your authorized service arm in the U.S.: your warranty, fulfilled locally, with downtime cut from weeks to days. An annual retainer keeps the capability standing; hourly work orders flex with your warranty load.

A fraction of the cost of a self-built U.S. service team · first region: California

  • TriageA technician at the machine, not a ticket queue overseas. Faults diagnosed where they happen.
  • RepairHardware service by engineers certified on your platform, under your warranty terms.
  • PartsCritical spares stocked stateside, so a repair never waits on an ocean crossing.
  • SLACommitted response times your buyers can put in their own contracts, dispatched and tracked.

Why neutral

We don’t sell robots, and we’re tied to no brand. That’s the whole point.

Neutrality lets every OEM trust us with their U.S. presence, and every American buyer trust us as a local partner. It is the Swiss position in a market otherwise full of conflicts of interest, and it is the one thing a robot maker cannot build for itself. Landing earns the relationship; service keeps the promise; every brand added makes the shared network better and cheaper for the rest.

Primary · OEMs

Robot makers worldwide, landing in the U.S.

Commercial and service-robot OEMs expanding into America. A reliable, U.S.-fluent partner who knows the rules over here and speaks manufacturing wherever you build, without you standing up a costly U.S. arm.

Secondary · operators

U.S. buyers, whatever the badge

Restaurant chains, hotels, senior care, commercial cleaning. A trustworthy local service partner, whichever brand the robot is.

Operators, not pitchmen.

Gavin Zeng CEO NYU Data Science · UC Berkeley M.S. Analytics. Leads business and software-systems strategy, OEM signing, and capital allocation.
Vincent Li CTO UT Austin B.S. Aerospace Engineering · ex-propulsion engineer at a drone startup. Leads the technical interface, hardware-systems strategy, and service-capability design.
Steve Yang Independent Chair MIT Ph.D. · ex-McKinsey and multinational-pharma executive. Governance and go-to-market judgement.

Soft infrastructure for robotics. Built in America.