The Asian Age

Rent-a-robot: Valley’s answer to labour crunch

- JANE LEE LIVERMORE, CALIF. AUG. 26

Silicon Valley has a new pitch to persuade small companies to automate: rent-a-robot.

Better technology and the need to pay higher wages to humans have produced a surge in sales of robots to big companies all across America. But few of these automatons are making it into smaller factories, which are wary of big upfront costs and lacking robot engineerin­g talent. read more

So venture capitalist­s are backing a new financial model: lease robots, install and maintain them, charge factories by the hour or month, cut the risk and initial costs.

Saman Farid, a former venture capitalist who invested in robots for over a decade and saw the challenges of getting robots into factories, set up renta-robot Formic Technologi­es with backing from Lux Capital and Initialize­d Capital, an early investor in self-driving tech startup Cruise.

Initialize­d Capital partner Garry Tan sees a confluence of cheaper and better robot computer vision and artificial intelligen­ce technology, low interest rates, and the threat of US-China tensions on supply chains stoking interest in robot subscripti­ons.

“It's at the centre of three of the largest mega trends that are driving all of society now,” said Tan.

Techies and small business owners do not always understand each other, a dilemma that led an industry group, the Associatio­n for Manufactur­ing Technology, to set up a San Francisco office a couple of years ago, to bring the two together.

The lease model puts much of the financial burden on robot startups which carry the risk of a manufactur­er losing a contract or changing a product. Smaller factories often have small runs of more tailored products that are not worth a robot. And Silicon Valley Robotics, an industry group supporting robot startups, says that in the past, funding has been a challenge.

Still, some high-profile investors are on board.

Tiger Global, the biggest funder of tech startups this year, has backed three robot firms offering subscripti­on in seven months. read more

Bob Albert, whose family owns Polar Hardware Manufactur­ing, a 105year-old metal stamping factory in Chicago, bought Formic’s pitch to pay less than $10 an hour for a robot, compared with over $20 an hour for his average human worker. He watched this month as a robot arm picked up a metal bar from a bin, spun around, and placed it in an older machine that bent it into a 42-inch door handle.

“If the robot works really well, we’ll use it a lot,” said Albert, who was pleased with the initial results. “And if it doesn't work out, neither one of us comes out very well. We have less skin in the game and they have some skin in the game.”

Westec Plastics Corp, a family-owned plastic moulding factory in Livermore, California, got its first robot in January 2020 and now has three.

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