Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

India’s Spinny lines up $160m funding to acquire GoMechanic, sources say

OpenAI hits back at Google with GPT-5.2 after ‘code red’ memo.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    OpenAI hits back at Google with GPT-5.2 after ‘code red’ memo.

    14 December 2025

    Trump’s AI executive order promises ‘a rulebook’ – startups may find legal loophole instead

    13 December 2025

    Ok, so what’s up with the LinkedIn algo?

    12 December 2025

    Google Released Its Deepest Research AI Agent To Date — The Same Day OpenAI Dropped GPT-5.2

    12 December 2025

    Disney hits Google with cease and desist alleging ‘massive’ copyright infringement

    11 December 2025
  • Apps

    Google’s AI testing feature for clothes now only works with a selfie

    14 December 2025

    DoorDash driver faces felony charges after allegedly spraying customers’ food

    13 December 2025

    Google Translate now lets you listen to real-time translations on your headphones

    13 December 2025

    With iOS 26.2, Apple lets you bring back Liquid Glass again — this time on the lock screen

    12 December 2025

    World launches its ‘super app’, including payment encryption and encrypted chat features

    12 December 2025
  • Crypto

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025

    Only 5 days until Disrupt 2025 sets the startup world on fire

    22 October 2025
  • Fintech

    Coinbase starts onboarding users again in India, plans to do fiat on-ramp next year

    7 December 2025

    Walmart-backed PhonePe shuts down Pincode app in yet another step back in e-commerce

    5 December 2025

    Nexus stays out of AI, keeping half of its new $700M fund for India startup

    4 December 2025

    Fintech firm Marquis notifies dozens of US banks and credit unions of data breach after ransomware attack

    3 December 2025

    Revolut hits $75 billion valuation in new capital raise

    24 November 2025
  • Hardware

    Pebble founder unveils $75 AI smart ring to record short notes with the push of a button

    10 December 2025

    Amazon’s Ring launches controversial AI-powered facial recognition feature on video doorbells

    10 December 2025

    Google’s first AI glasses are expected next year

    9 December 2025

    eSIM adoption is on the rise thanks to travel and device compatibility

    6 December 2025

    AWS re:Invent was an all-in pitch for AI. Customers may not be ready.

    5 December 2025
  • Media & Entertainment

    Disney signs deal with OpenAI to allow Sora to create AI videos with its characters

    11 December 2025

    YouTube TV will launch genre-based subscription plans in 2026

    11 December 2025

    Founder of AI startup Tavus says users talk to AI Santa ‘for hours’ a day

    10 December 2025

    Spotify releases music videos in the US and Canada for Premium subscribers

    9 December 2025

    Amazon Music’s 2025 Delivered is now here to compete with Spotify Wrapped

    9 December 2025
  • Security

    The flaw in the photo booth manufacturer’s website exposes customers’ photos

    13 December 2025

    Home Depot exposed access to internal systems for a year, researcher says

    13 December 2025

    Security flaws in the Freedom Chat app exposed users’ phone numbers and PINs

    11 December 2025

    Petco takes down Vetco website after exposing customers’ personal information

    10 December 2025

    Petco’s security bug affected customers’ SSNs, driver’s licenses and more

    9 December 2025
  • Startups

    Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

    14 December 2025

    Eclipse Energy’s microbes can turn dormant oil wells into hydrogen factories

    13 December 2025

    Interest in Spoor’s AI bird tracking software is soaring

    13 December 2025

    Retro, a photo-sharing app for friends, lets you ‘time travel’ to your camera roll

    12 December 2025

    On Me Raises $6M to Shake Up the Gift Card Industry

    12 December 2025
  • Transportation

    India’s Spinny lines up $160m funding to acquire GoMechanic, sources say

    14 December 2025

    Inside Rivian’s big bet on self-driving with artificial intelligence

    13 December 2025

    Zevo wants to add robotaxis to its car-sharing fleet, starting with newcomer Tensor

    13 December 2025

    Driving aboard Rivian’s fight for autonomy

    12 December 2025

    Rivian goes big on autonomy, with custom silicon, lidar and a hint of robotaxis

    12 December 2025
  • Venture

    Runware raises $50 million in Series A to make it easier for developers to create images and videos

    12 December 2025

    Stanford’s star reporter understands Silicon Valley’s startup culture

    12 December 2025

    The market has “changed” and founders now have the power, VCs say

    11 December 2025

    Tiger Global plans cautious business future with new $2.2 billion fund

    8 December 2025

    Sources: AI-powered synthetic research startup Aaru raises Series A at $1B ‘headline’ valuation

    6 December 2025
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»Agility Robotics’ new CEO ‘focuses on the here and now’
Startups

Agility Robotics’ new CEO ‘focuses on the here and now’

techtost.comBy techtost.com6 March 202406 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Agility Robotics' New Ceo 'focuses On The Here And Now'
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

There was nothing like Digit at ProMat last year. The manufacturing supply chain event has gradually transformed into a technology exhibition in recent years. Many of the biggest names in the space were in attendance, showcasing autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), bin pick-up arms and automated storage and retrieval systems. But Agility’s small army of bipedal robots was all there was to talk about.

A year later, the conversation has changed. The idea of ​​humanoid robots working in factories no longer seems like some distant fantasy. Sure, there’s validation in last week’s $675 million fundraiser from competitor Figure. Interest in humanoid robots is at an all-time high, and investors no longer consider it a pipe dream.

Videos taken at last March’s event were widely shared online, exposing Agility’s robot to its largest audience to date. The demonstrations captured something fundamental to the field of industrial robotics, as highly complex and technically impressive bots repeated the same boring activity over and over again—in this case, moving back and forth between a wall and the conveyor belt. According to Agility co-founder Damion Shelton, it was here that the then-CEO began exploring succession plans.

“When we went through ProMat last year, that was really the point where I said, ‘okay, the company is very different now than when we founded it,’” Shelton told TechCrunch. “This was really the first time we had publicly shown robotics doing work — but also, frankly, the first time anyone had shown a humanoid [robots] I’m working. So that was really the catalyst. We started a search process last August.”

Two months before the event, Agility brought in Apple/iPad vet Aindrea Campbell as COO to handle the company’s rapidly scaling production plans. Four months later, Shelton’s co-founder Jonathan Hurst stepped down from the CTO role, moving to head robotics focused on research. Melonee Wise — who had most recently worked at Zebra after it acquired AMR startup logistics company Fetch — replaced Hurst.

Toronto, Canada – May 21, 2019. Peggy Johnson, Executive Vice President, Business Development, Microsoft, on Center Stage during the first day of Collision 2019 at the Enercare Center in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

This week, Agility named a Microsoft veteran Peggy Johnson its second CEO. With this, the company is, perhaps, unique among its peers in having female executives in five C-Suite roles. Unlike Wise, Johnson does not have the robotics background of her predecessor. However, it has a long history in the tech world. Her career began at mobile chip giant Qualcomm, where she would eventually spend a quarter of a century.

He spent the next half-dozen years at Microsoft, where he helped lead the HoloLens team—a gig he used to become CEO of Magic Leap. He spent three years there turning the well-funded but struggling augmented reality company around from consumer gaming to enterprise applications. As of this writing, the success of this particular effort remains a very open question.

After yesterday’s announcement, Johnson joined Shelton and me on a call. He had finished running the Tokyo marathon the day before, but we managed to find a chunk of time that aligned with all three time zones. Johnson reflected on the parallels and difference between Agility and her previous gig.

“What it looks like is a very exciting product and technology, with a need and demand for it,” he explained. “The difference is that Agility found product-market fit, which really appealed to me. Today, right now, Digit can provide ROI to customers. And they’re not trying to boil the ocean. They just focus on a handful of use cases where Digit can provide value.”

Perhaps the biggest difference between Agility and the growing army of humanoid robotics startups is its big beginning. The company was founded in 2015 as a spinoff of Hurst’s work on legged robotics at the University of Oregon. Digit made its public debut at CES four years later as part of a partnership with Ford. At the time, Agility saw last-mile delivery as the most logical fit in the market. That deal, however, did not bear fruit as the company turned to the burgeoning world of warehouse automation.

Melonee Wise and Damion Shelton of Agility speak at TechCrunch Disrupt 2023

Image Credits: Mark Reinertson/The Photo Group / Flickr (opens in new window) under a CC BY 2.0 (opens in new window) permission.

The Oregon-based company currently employs more than 200 people. He won’t yet reveal the number of figures he’s shipped, noting only that he built about 60 units of an earlier version.

During our conversation, Shelton mentioned Digit’s ability to traverse rough terrain, adding, “I’d love to get back to things like last-mile delivery at some point.” For now, however, warehouse work is very much the focus of the robot. Specifically, the robot is capable of moving bags of various shapes and sizes around the floor. That’s exactly how the bot was developed during select Amazon pilots announced last year.

“It went really well,” Shelton said. “We’re excited to continue with them as a partner, but no major updates since last fall’s event.

Johnson said Digit’s ability to get the job done today was a big driver in her decision to lead the company after her first conversation with Shelton a little more than a month ago. “From the outside looking at Agility, I like their focus on the here and now,” he explained. “What can the robot do today to provide value? Obviously, there’s a roadmap ahead of us of features that incorporate AI elements, that incorporate hardware elements, that integrate software elements, but for today, at this point in time that they deliver value, they’re spot on. As [Shelton] said, there really is no one else doing what Agility is doing right now for customers today.”

The AI ​​reference was, in part, a reference to work was recently introduced from the company using LLM to help Digit adapt to the ever-changing real world in front of it. Interest in the class has — no doubt — been a key driver of investor interest in the ways it could potentially impact the way robots learn and interact with the world.

While Agility doesn’t specifically want to raise right now, the company says the possibility is always on the table. “The data is out there,” Johnson says of Figure’s recent impressive $2.6 billion valuation. “All the boats are coming up with that kind of headlines and we’re definitely going to capitalize on that.”

Shelton is quick to note that Agility’s last valuation came with a fundraising round about three years ago.

agility agility robotics Amazon CEO focuses Peggy Johnson Robotics
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous Article2024 all-electric Dodge Charger debuts with muscle car donuts, drifts and even a Hellcat rumble
Next Article Cyber ​​asset management specialist Axonius secures $200 million at $2.6 billion firm valuation
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

14 December 2025

Eclipse Energy’s microbes can turn dormant oil wells into hydrogen factories

13 December 2025

Interest in Spoor’s AI bird tracking software is soaring

13 December 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

14 December 2025

India’s Spinny lines up $160m funding to acquire GoMechanic, sources say

14 December 2025

OpenAI hits back at Google with GPT-5.2 after ‘code red’ memo.

14 December 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Coinbase starts onboarding users again in India, plans to do fiat on-ramp next year

7 December 2025

Walmart-backed PhonePe shuts down Pincode app in yet another step back in e-commerce

5 December 2025

Nexus stays out of AI, keeping half of its new $700M fund for India startup

4 December 2025
Startups

Port raises $100M valuation from $800M round to take on Spotify’s Backstage

Eclipse Energy’s microbes can turn dormant oil wells into hydrogen factories

Interest in Spoor’s AI bird tracking software is soaring

© 2025 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.