Drone startup Airware crashes, will shut down after burning $118M
Drone operating system startup Airware today suddenly informed employees
it will cease operations immediately despite having raised $118 million
from top investors like Andreessen Horowitz, Google’s GV, and Kleiner
Perkins. The startup ran out of money after trying to manufacture its
own hardware that couldn’t compete with drone giants like China’s DJI.
The company at one point had as many as 140 employees, all of which are
now out of a job.
A source sent TechCrunch screenshots from the Airware alumni Slack
channel detailing how the staff was told this morning that Airware would
shut down.
Airware makes a cloud sofware system that helps enterprise customers
like construction companies, mining operations, and insurance companies
reviewing equipment for damages to use drones to collect and analyze
aerial data. That allowed companies to avoid using expensive helicopters
or dangerous rigs with humans on harnesses to make inspections and
gauge work progress.
One ex-employee asked “How do I get my options sent to me on paper so I can burn them all in a fire?😅”
Founded in 2011 by Jonathan Downey, the son of two pilots, Airware first
built an autopilot system for programming drones to follow certain
routes to collect data. It could help businesses check rooftops for
damage, see how much of a raw material was coming out of a mine, or
build constantly-updated maps of construction sites. Later it tried to
build its own drones before pivoting to consult clients on how to most
efficiently apply unmanned aerial vehicles.
While flying high, Airware launched its own Commercial Drone Fund for
investing in the market in 2015, and acquired 38-person drone analytics
startup Redbird in 2016. In this pre-crypto, pre-AI boom, Airware scored
a ton of hype from us and others as tried to prove drones could be more
than war machines. But over time, the software that shipped with
commercial drone hardware from other manufacturers was good enough to
make Airware irrelevant, and a downward spiral of layoffs began over the
past two years, culminating in today’s shutdown. Demonstating how
sudden the shut down is, Airware opened a Tokyo headquarters alongside
an investment and partnership from Mitsubishi just four days ago.
“Airware was ahead of the game trying to build their software. So far
ahead that the drone hardware on the market wasn’t sophisticated enough
to actually produce the granularity of data they needed to test out
their software/train their algorithms” an ex-employee told TechCrunch
(emphasis ours). “So they spent shitloads of money designing bespoke
hardware, including two drones in-house, one multi-rotor called an
AT-28, and one fixed-wing called Cygnet. Both projects were scuttled as
hardware from DJI and Ebee caught up to needs, after sinking tons of
engineering time and manufacturing into them.”
Following TechCrunch’s inquiry about the unnannounced news, Airware confirmed the shut down to us with this statement:
“History has taught us how hard it can be to call the timing of a
market transition. We have seen this play out first hand in the
commercial drone marketplace. We were the pioneers in this market and
one of the first to see the power drones could have in the commercial
sector. Unfortunately, the market took longer to mature than we
expected. As we worked through the various required pivots to position
ourselves for long term success, we ran out of financial runway. As a
result, it is with a heavy heart that we notified our team, customers,
and partners that we will wind down the business.
This is not the business outcome we had worked so hard for over the
years and yet we are deeply proud of our company’s accomplishments and
our leadership in driving the adoption of drone powered analytics to
improve productivity, mitigate risks, and take workers out of harm’s
way.
As we close the book of Airware; we want to thank the partners and
customers who believed in us and helped us along the way. And, while it
is difficult to say goodbye to our team, we want to thank them for all
they have contributed to Airware and the industry. We look forward to
seeing how they will take their learnings from Airware to fuel continued
innovations in the world around us.”
[Update: Since we broke the news, Airware has put up a “thank you” note
about the shutdown informing clients that “A representative from the
Airware team will be in touch.”]
An Airware-hardware equipped drone
Employees will get one week’s severance, COBRA insurance until November,
and payouts for unused paid time off. It appears the startup wasn’t
able to raise necessary funding to save the company or secure an
acquisition from one of its strategic partners like Catepillar.
Airware will serve as cautionary tale of startup overspending in hopes
of finding product-market fit. Had it been more frugal, saved cash to
extend its runway, and given corporate clients more time to figure out
how to use drones, Airware might have stayed afloat. Sometimes, even
having the most prestigious investors can’t save a startup from
mismanagement.
Our ex-employee source concludes that “I think having $118M in the bank
led Airware to charge ahead and sink tons of money into force-it-to-work
methods rather than exercise a bit of patience and wait for the
inevitable advance of hardware to catch up. They had a knack for hiring
extremely talented and expensive people from places like Google,
Autodesk, there was even SpaceX and NASA alumni there.
They spared no expense ever.”
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