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§ Private Profile · London, United Kingdom
Data-driven intelligence platform delivering real-time operational insights for industrial operations, focused on Mesh Intelligence.
Alluvium operates as a technology organization comprising a New York, New York-based industrial data intelligence platform and a Lagos, Nigeria-based IT consulting firm specializing in cloud migrations. The organization's industrial division utilizes a proprietary Mesh Intelligence system to deliver real-time operational insights and machine learning capabilities for complex manufacturing and Industry 4.0 sectors. Simultaneously, the consulting branch functions as an authorized Platinum Solution Partner for Atlassian, assisting enterprise and mid-market businesses with IT service management and the implementation of software tools like Jira and Confluence. The industrial data startup segment successfully raised $2.5 million in total seed funding to scale its operations before being acquired by the machine health company Augury in January 2019. The enterprise was originally founded in the year 2015 by a leadership team that includes co-founders Mike Olson and Taiwo Ojo.
Alluvium has raised $3.0M across 1 funding round.
Alluvium has raised $3.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Alluvium has raised $3.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Alluvium's investors include Bloomberg Beta, DCM, FirstMark Capital, IA Ventures, Work-Bench, Justin Label, Lux Capital.
Alluvium has raised $3.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $3.0M Seed in December 2016.
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 28, 2023 | VAMA | $1.5M Seed | Phuong Tran | Burak Buyukdemir, Dhruv Dhanraj Bahl, Harit Nagpal, Lisa Gokongwei, Blume Ventures |
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 1, 2016 | $3M Seed | — | Bloomberg Beta, DCM, FirstMark Capital, IA Ventures, Work Bench, Justin Label, LUX Capital | Announced |
Alluvium is a technology company specializing in IoT and AI solutions for industrial operations, with multiple entities sharing the name but distinct focuses. The most prominent U.S.-based Alluvium, founded in 2015 in New York, developed a data-driven intelligence platform delivering real-time operational insights to complex industrial operations, particularly in manufacturing, using machine learning and AI for safety and efficiency; it raised $2.5M before being acquired by Augury in January 2019.[1] A separate Indian startup, Alluvium (alluvium.in), based in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, connects factories with IoT and AI for worker safety, productivity, asset compliance, and geolocation tracking, reporting $6.6M revenue as a bootstrapped enterprise tech firm founded around 2018.[2][5][6] Additionally, Alluvium (alluvium.net), an Atlassian Gold Partner founded in 2016, provides ITSM, DevOps, Agile, and cloud migration consulting across the US, UK, and Nigeria, helping clients consolidate tools like Jira and Confluence to cut license costs by 15-45%.[3][4]
These companies serve manufacturing, industrial, and enterprise clients, solving problems like operational complexity, worker safety, and digital transformation inefficiencies. The U.S. entity showed early traction before acquisition, while the Indian firm emphasizes geolocation for factories, and the consulting firm boasts 80+ projects, 30+ clients, and 98% success rate with growth in Atlassian ecosystem services.[1][2][3]
The New York-based Alluvium emerged in 2015 as an IoT analytics startup simplifying complex data streams into real-time insights for industrial safety and operations, gaining traction among U.S. manufacturers before its 2019 acquisition by Augury.[1] The Indian Alluvium, founded around 2018 in Ahmedabad, bootstrapped as an enterprise tech firm focusing on IoT-AI for factory worker safety and productivity, leveraging geolocation tech tailored to industrial contexts without notable founder details publicly available.[2][5][6] Meanwhile, the Atlassian-focused Alluvium began in summer 2016 when Taiwo and Wale, both ex-Big Four consultants, collaborated on a UK bank's digital transformation, consolidating Atlassian tools and establishing Agile practices; their success led to projects with major UK telecoms and expansions into ITSM, DevOps, and migrations.[3]
Pivotal moments include the U.S. firm's acquisition marking validation in industrial AI, the Indian entity's revenue growth to $6.6M via factory IoT solutions, and the consulting firm's scaling to 15+ migration experts after high-profile consolidations saving clients significant costs.[1][2][3]
These differentiators emphasize practical, sector-tailored tech: operational AI for U.S./India industrial ops and workflow optimization for enterprise consulting, with strong client outcomes like cost savings and scalability.[1][2][3]
Alluvium entities ride Industry 4.0 trends—IoT/AI for smart manufacturing and digital transformation—addressing labor shortages, safety regulations, and efficiency demands in factories amid global supply chain shifts.[1][2] Timing aligns with post-2015 IIoT growth and Atlassian ecosystem expansion, where industrial data ops (U.S./India) counter rising operational costs, and consulting aids cloud migrations amid hybrid work.[3][4] Market forces like AI adoption in manufacturing (e.g., predictive analytics) and enterprise tool consolidation favor them, influencing ecosystems by enabling safer factories and streamlined DevOps, as seen in acquisitions and client savings that accelerate tech uptake.[1][2][3]
With the U.S. Alluvium absorbed into Augury, expect amplified impact in industrial AI via larger-scale deployments. India's bootstrapped growth positions it for expansion in emerging markets' smart factories, potentially via partnerships amid IoT proliferation. The consulting Alluvium, with recent success stories in sports, logistics, and publishing (2024), will likely deepen Atlassian integrations as enterprises prioritize AI-enhanced workflows.[1][2][3][4] Trends like edge AI, regulatory safety mandates, and multi-cloud shifts will propel them, evolving their roles from niche solvers to ecosystem enablers—echoing their origins in simplifying industrial and digital complexities for sustained productivity gains.