Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Firm uses AI to match builders with hard-to-find custom parts

- By Thomas Heath

When NASA needed $59,000 in custom components so the Internatio­nal Space Station would have clean air, an engineer went online, punched in the specificat­ions and hit send.

On the receiving end, a Maryland company put its patented software to work; within seconds, it had a price and delivery date for parts destined to live 250 miles beyond Earth.

Gaithersbu­rg, Md.-based Xometry helps companies fill supply chain gaps by quickly combing through thousands of providers to track down custom parts.

“We combine artificial intelligen­ce with algorithms to predict the market price of customized parts within seconds,” said Xometry cofounder and CEO Randy Altschuler. “The same software then scours our 5,000 manufactur­ers to deliver the right source at the right price.”

Mr. Altschuler said revenues have been growing fast: Sales topped $800,000 in 2014, $2.9 million in 2015, $80 million in 2019 and are now headed toward $150 million. He wouldn’t get into details about the profit side, other than to say he expects the company will turn one “in the next couple of years.”

But its gross margin before payroll and expenses is probably at least $30 million.

Xometry has 400 people on its payroll, including software engineers and data scientists. Half the staff works out of Xometry’s three Washington- area offices. The rest are scattered across the U.S. and Europe.

Mr. Altschuler, who would not say how much of the company he still owns, said he and co-founder Laurence Zuriff plan to take Xometry public in 2021. They have hired a chief financial

officer and added former Washington Post publisher Katharine Weymouth to its board of directors in preparatio­n.

Since launching in 2014, Xometry has raised about $150 million from such investors as T. Rowe Price Funds, Henry Ellenbogen’s Durable Capital Partners, the Foundry Group, Highland Capital Partners and Dell Technologi­es Capital.

“There are thousands of small manufactur­ers across the U.S. making small things and doing billions of dollars of business,” Mr. Altschuler said. “It’s very fragmented — mostly family businesses doing a couple of million dollars a year. It could be a couple of brothers running a manufactur­ing shop started by their grandfathe­r.”

These small suppliers have been heavily reliant on the health of big companies in their regions. If you are in Houston, your business lives and dies with oil and gas. In the Midwest, it’s automotive. Boston caters to medical

device companies. Washington is known for its aerospace and defense.

Mr. Altschuler has essentiall­y created on-demand shopping for the $260 billion business-to-business marketplac­e for custom manufactur­ed parts.

“There’s no directory to find these small manufactur­ers,” he said. “There is no Craigslist, no place for these guys to get work when those local big industries aren’t doing well.”

Xometry has opened up these small companies to big firms like Bosch, General Electric, Dell and BMW, all of which may be looking for a just-in-time piece like an injection-molded part or metal 3D printing that might be a few hundred or few thousand dollars — not enough to buy in huge quantities. Xometry’s average sale is $2,000 to $3,000.

Xometry’s artificial intelligen­ce sifts through thousands of manufactur­ers in its database and zeros in on the one best suited to make the part — and at a price that allows

Xometry to turn a profit.

Its gross margin — known as the “take rate” — comes from the difference between what the online shopper such as NASA pays for a part and what the small manufactur­er sells it for.

“We are on the hook for finding a price that is cheaper than what we have already sold the part for,” Mr. Altschuler said.

The program determines which company gets first crack at the job. If the supplier doesn’t respond, a message is sent to the next-best candidate, and the process keeps going until there is a confirmed match. Xometry makes money on more than 90% of the transactio­ns.

“A manufactur­er might be sipping a Coke at McDonald’s when he or she presses their iPhone and agrees to the job,” Mr. Altschuler said, adding that 30% of orders are accepted on cellphones.

Mr. Altschuler said there was no “aha moment” that spawned the idea for Xometry. “We just figured it out.”

 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post ?? Co-founder and CEO Randy Altschuler uses Xometry, an AI software, to track down niche parts for manufactur­ers.
Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post Co-founder and CEO Randy Altschuler uses Xometry, an AI software, to track down niche parts for manufactur­ers.

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