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Verve Motion Hauls in $15M for its Exosuit, Which Ahold Delhaize Piloted

by Chris Albrecht
July 15, 2021July 15, 2021Filed under:
  • Connected Kitchen
  • Funding
  • Future of Grocery
  • Grocery
  • Robotics, AI & Data
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For workers who spend their days moving heavy things, the refrain “lift with your legs and not with your back,” could soon become “lift with your legs while wearing the high-tech exosuit.” Verve Motion, which makes just such an exosuit that assists people when picking up objects, has raised $15 million, TechCrunch was first to report today. This Series A round was led by Construct Capital with participation from existing investors, such as Founder Collective, Pillar VC, Safar Partners and OUP.

Verve Motion’s SafeLift suit sounds like something straight out of a Marvel movie. From the product description on the company’s website:

The technology behind SafeLift has been developed at Harvard over the past decade, and is based on the latest advances in robotics, apparel design, and movement science. The suit applies assistance in parallel with the user’s muscles and responds to their movement in milliseconds. It combines state-of-the-art motion tracking technology with powerful robotic actuators and integrates it all into a lightweight and easily wearable device that doesn’t restrict normal activities.

As The Wall Street Journal reported last month, Verve Motion’s suit was piloted by Ahold Delhaize last year to help warehouse workers who assembled goods for retail outlets and e-commerce orders. The suit doesn’t grant superhuman strength like the power loader from Aliens. Instead, it reduces strain associated with doing the literal heavy lifting at work. Verve Motion says that the SafeLift can reduce strain by 30 percent when performing strenuous tasks, resulting in fewer injuries and lower fatigue rates.

The technology is still new and as the WSJ points out, exosuits like this should be studied for any long-term impacts on workers. But should exosuits prove to be a safe and effective way for workers to move boxes of groceries around in a fulfillment center, we could see increased adoption of the technology. Online grocery sales were $7 billion in May of this year, and e-commerce is expected to a be a pandemic-borne habit that sticks with consumers going forward. As a result, grocery retailers will need ways to fulfill all those orders. Some retailers are adopting robotic fulfillment solutions a la Ocado or Takeoff, but exosuits could prove to be another great fit as well.


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