Robotics Industry Pioneer Mick Mountz Joins Board of Directors
RightHand Robotics (RHR), an integrated robotic piece-picking solutions company, announced today that it has secured $23 million in a Series B funding round led by Menlo Ventures, an active investor in the robotics sector. GV (formerly Google Ventures) also joined this round along with existing investors, including Dream Incubator, Matrix Partners, and Playground Global. RHR intends to use the funds to expand business and technical teams and broaden its suite of product applications in support of the company’s growing customer base.
Leif Jentoft, co-founder of RightHand Robotics, noted the importance of flexible robotic part picking due to the recent boom in e-commerce and scarcity of labor. The company is planning to use this funding to support the RightPick product line.
According to the company, RightHand’s RightPick platform addresses challenges that arise due to the rapid shift to online shopping and the need for retailers to compete by delivering individual goods directly to consumers when and where they want. Fulfilling these e-commerce orders is much more labor-intensive than traditional retail store restocking, based on the number of “touches” each item requires.
“RightHand Robotics developed a comprehensive, integrated solution that resonates with a wide variety of e-commerce companies,” said Andy Wheeler, General Partner at GV. “The founding team of roboticists at RightHand have the right expertise, full-stack product, and overall vision to make an impact on this growing market.”
The company also announced that Mick Mountz, founder and former CEO of Kiva Systems, recognized for launching the most widely deployed robotics solution in the world, will join the Board of Directors. After spending 13 years in high-tech product development, manufacturing, and marketing at Motorola, Apple, and Webvan, Mountz founded Kiva in January 2003, specifically to solve the pick-pack-and-ship material handling challenges presented by e-commerce.
“RightHand is picking up where we left off,” said Mountz. “Customers saw products coming directly to operators for picking and packing and would ask: ‘Why don’t you also automate this step with a robotic arm and gripper?’ But that was a difficult problem that we knew would require years of research and technical breakthroughs.”
Mountz added, “RightHand has, in fact, developed that solution – mastering the critical performance requirements of real-world distribution center environments. This funding round enables a very exciting phase of rapid roll-out and scale-up for the company.”
To read more about robotic part picking solutions, check out New Bin Picking Solution Developed by Lean Team of Engineers, which is about the small company CapSen Robotics.