Geopolitical pressures have accelerated demand from many countries and regions back on the shore. This means that in order to redevelop the infrastructure of a critical industry and revive the business, some or all of its industrial operations have been moved or outsourced to a remote country.
But that’s easier than that. For example, in the critical areas of precision manufacturing, most countries in the western world are not set up to handle the current production demands facing companies.
This is the challenge that Isenbad aims to address. The UK startup said it plans to create a network of factories in several western locations. CEO Alexander Fitzgerald told TechCrunch that the first of these began operating in London in January, claiming that they could already accommodate requests for precision parts. No further locations have been disclosed yet.
The goal here is to contract with a company that normally produces manufacturers, although it may not be sinking billions of capital investments into its own factory.
“Let’s say you’re just like a drone, you’re making a free aviation system,” Fitzgerald said. “We will send the design of some important parts in 3D files. We will give you an estimate of how fast it will be and how much it will be priced. Then we will machine the pieces from the materials you need and ship them out. ISEMBARD aims to be an economies of scale across its own operations, with its own software layer, Masonos connecting and powering the facilities.
This is not fundamentally different to sending exactly the same requests to factories in Asia, but is consistent with increasing demand for a more local, resilient, and greener supply chain.
Fitzgerald believes that legacy UK suppliers will have a hard time dealing with the bigger rerun swing. The supply chain is fragmented, skilled operators are retiring or moving into different roles, and factories are outdated. By leveraging software and automation, ISEMBARD believes it can provide a viable alternative to the current situation, and it just happens to present faster and cheaper options.
The pitch helped startups secure £7 million (approximately $9 million) led by conceptual capital, and joined by angels including 201 ventures, base capital, forward funds, material ventures, Neverlift ventures, NP Hard ventures, and EU INC promoter Andrea Clinger and Space Forge founder Joshua Western.
ISEMBARD’s to-market strategy initially focuses on aerospace, defense and energy. Fitzgerald refused to quit his client’s name, but said the company saw a large portion of its initial traction coming from defense and fast-growing startups. He claimed that he and his team were also talking to primes and government agencies.
Isembard is still small, as there are only 12 employees. This is the part so far, because they were raising their own funds from Fitzgerald’s first exit. He sold his former company Cuckoo to Giganet.
“We think that building these large 100,000-square-foot factories would take too much talent in one location, too long, too much time,” he said. “What we’re actually doing is a distributed factory model with lots of much smaller units, all with the same operating model technology and automation.”
This is a reference to the ability of Maynonos to do everything from customer citations and estimation to managing its own supply chain, automating scheduling and prioritization, to core manufacturing and coding the machine itself. “At this point, the problem is that it’s all paper-based or all software in the ’70s,” he said.
Despite this latest software layer, Isembard is a highly engineering-focused company. Due to the original already in use, the name nods to British industrialist and engineer Isan Bird Kingdom Brunel, known for his work during the Industrial Revolution. But as the manifesto startup said, it also receives pages from his father.
“When Isanbird Kingdom Brunel’s father saw British soldiers return from the Peninsula War with injured feet due to a tinsel footwear supplier,” he said, “he established a shoe factory.”
This reference is intended to reflect the spirit and ambitions of Isembard, but it is no coincidence that it is about soldiers. Although none of Fitzgerald’s family was in the military, he “always had a sense of patriotism” and has been a reserve since 2016. “We want to solve the industrialization of the West,” he said.