Startup World

Tesla famously struggled to scale up production of the Model 3 sedan in 2018 so much so that CEO Elon Musk said his company was weeks away from collapsing.
That near-death experience helped spawn a whole new company called Atomic thats built around using AI to streamline supply chains.Co-founded by former Tesla employees Michael Rossiter and Neal Suidan, Atomic was created inside DVx Ventures, the firm run by former Tesla president Jon McNeill.
Rossiter is also a partner at DVx, which has led a $3 million seed round for Atomic, with Seattle-based Madrona Ventures joining.Michael and Neil experienced this pain firsthand as leaders at Tesla in the supply chain, and I saw that work first hand because they worked for me, McNeill said in an interview with A Technology NewsRoom.
Atomic plans to deploy its agentic AI with customers to make inventory planning faster and easier.
Its already been working with pilot customers.
In one case, the customer was able to cut inventory levels in half while maintaining a 99% in-stock rate.Being able to strike a balance like that frees up working capital that a business can use in other places, while also reducing risk, McNeill said.
If you have too much capital tied up in inventory, you could really harm the business.
And if you have too little, where you dont have the right things in stock when the customer is ready to purchase, then youre costing yourself big time, he said.More broadly, Atomics early customers have been in the consumer packaged goods, food and beverage, and apparel industries.
The company claims it has helped those customers reduce inventory costs by 20% to 50%.With so much uncertainty in the world right now, theres big demand for solutions like Atomics because existing ones arent built for this kind of volatility, Suidan said in an interview.Currently, planners will, like, lock themselves in a room for a week trying to put together different scenarios, present those back to the leadership, and get a question they werent anticipating, Suidan said.
Then they have to go back to these documents, spend a few days, and its becomes this process that can be all consuming for them, because they dont have the tools available to manage the uncertainty with confidence.Atomics software pulls information from those same source documents but lets inventory planners and supply chain team members quickly simulate multiple scenarios something that would normally take hours or days.
Rossiter and Suidan pride themselves on being able to get up and running with a customer quickly, and with adaptability.You cant be writing a custom application for every customer.
You need a flexible data model thats generalized, that can apply to everyone, because then you can be up and running really, really quickly, Suidan said.
And you need to give precision control to the planner so that they feel true ownership over the plan, and they can explain it inside and out, and can pull all the levers in the plan.
And if you can combine those two things, which has been our total focus, then you solve the problem for the planner.Many Tesla employees have gone on to found their own startups, including former CTO JB Straubel (Redwood Materials) and, most recently, former SVP Drew Baglino (Heron).
But Atomic is different.
Instead of just taking skills learned at Tesla and applying them to new problems, Suidan and Rossiter are building Atomic around a philosophy they developed together at the automaker.
They built the end-to-end supply chain orchestration system from scratch at Tesla, McNeill said.
Suidan said the value of what they built at Tesla was just as much about the solution as it was changing the process.The way the business was planned when we started was a dozen different teams working in isolation, passing these spreadsheets around, trying to tie it together once a week to present executives some summary of a plan, and then spending most of the rest of the week, chasing our tail, trying to figure out why one part didnt work or the other part didnt work, Suidan said.
Our jobs became to to build a system that could thrive and drive this company, keep its dynamism, keep its ability to hit these business targets.
Suidan said the planning system they built inside Tesla resulted in a complete transformation in the day-to-day operations.
While Rossiter left Tesla shortly after the ramp-up of the Model 3, Suidan stuck around until 2022.
In 2023 that Suidan said the two put their heads together and asked: How could this kind of transformation work for everybody, all businesses? And they set out to create Atomic inside DVx.In typical Tesla fashion, they really are aiming that high.
Our ambition, our vision, is to support every company that sells physical goods, Rossiter said.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Fortnite will return to iOS as court slams Apple's disturbance and cover-up


If you’re in the market for a $1,900 color E Ink monitor, one of them exists now


DNA links modern pueblo dwellers to Chaco Canyon people


Raspberry Pi cuts product returns by 50% by altering its pin soldering


Research study roundup: Tattooed tardigrades and splash-free urinals


Sundar Pichai says DOJ demands are a “de facto” spin-off of Google search


Windows RDP lets you log in utilizing withdrawed passwords. Microsoft is OK with that.The ability to use a withdrawed password to visit through RDP takes place when a Windows maker that's checked in with a Microsoft or Azure account is configured to allow


RFK Jr. rejects cornerstone of health science: Germ theory


Millions of Apple Airplay-enabled devices can be hacked via Wi-Fi


NASA just swapped a 10-year-old Artemis II engine with one nearly twice its age


CBS owner Paramount reportedly intends to settle Trump’s $20 billion lawsuit


Nintendo imposes new limits on sharing for digital Switch games


After convincing senators he supports Artemis, Isaacman election advances


First Amendment doesn’t just protect human speech, chatbot maker argues


Republicans want to tax EV drivers $200/year in new transport bill


The end of an AI that shocked the world: OpenAI retires GPT-4


Redditor accidentally reinvents discarded ’90s tool to escape today’s age gates


Intel says it’s rolling out laptop GPU drivers with 10% to 25% better performance


OpenAI rolls back update that made ChatGPT a sycophantic mess


Baykar and Leonardo Partnership Officially Exchanged at Turkey – Italy Intergovernmental Summit


GA-ASI Delivers MQ-9A Block 5 Extended Range UAS to USMC


US Army Selects Near Earth Autonomy and Honeywell to Deliver Autonomous Black Hawk Logistics Solution


NASA Tests Ultralight Antennas


Altitude Angel and AirHub Sign Partnership Agreement


Piasecki Aircraft Acquires Kaman Air Vehicles' KARGO UAV Program


MBDA Invests in UK’s Hydra Drones


UK Royal Navy Jet-Powered Drones Project Completed


Volz Servos Gets EN/AS 9100 Aviation Certificate


China Unveils Thermos Drone


Why DJI drone batteries drain themselves


FlytBase intros $99/month plan to scale remote drones


Your guide to Day 1 of the 2025 Robotics Summit Expo


A guide to everything going on at the 2025 Robotics Summit Expo


NexCOBOT to demonstrate EtherCAT AI robot controllers at Robotics Summit


BurgerBots opens restaurant with ABB robots preparing fast food


Epson adds GX-C Series with RC800A controller to its robot line


DeepSeek Unveils DeepSeek-Prover-V2: Advancing Neural Theorem Proving with Recursive Proof Search and a New Benchmark


Sam Altman's World unveils a mobile verification gadget


Gruve.ai guarantees software-like margins for AI tech consulting, interfering with decades-old Industry


The increase of retail financiers in secondaries, and why postponed IPOs will end up being the standard


Social Agent's new app lets you book a photographer within 30 minutes


Cast your vote: Help shape the A Technology NewsRoom All Stage agenda


Side Event submission deadline extended for A Technology NewsRoom Sessions: AI


5 days left: $210 ticket discount rate and 50% off on the second for A Technology NewsRoom Sessions AI


Nuvo, a network for B2B trade, has nabbed $34M from Sequoia and Spark Capital


Supio, an AI-powered legal analysis platform, lands $60M


AI sales tax startup Kintsugi has doubled its valuation in 6 months