BleedIO Tech builds the foundational wireless infrastructure layer for Industry 4.0, delivering hyper-local mesh networks with AI on the edge to extend connectivity into industrial dead zones. Unlike traditional hub-based systems that degrade in dense, noisy, or harsh environments, BleedIO's decentralized, self-healing mesh architecture maintains always-on connectivity without a single point of failure. The company targets manufacturers, warehouses, refineries, shipyards, and other critical operations where existing Wi-Fi, cellular, and proprietary IoT solutions consistently fail. BleedIO offers a SaaS-first business model with monthly per-device subscriptions and multi-year contracts, positioning itself as the agnostic infrastructure layer rather than another IoT device.
Lee Beup
founder
Unplanned downtime costs Global 2000 companies $600 billion per year, with wireless network failures alone costing US industrials an estimated $15 billion annually. Traditional hub-based wireless networks break down in the dense, noisy, contested RF environments — refineries, freezers, shipyards — where reliable connectivity is most critical. As more IoT devices are added, performance deteriorates further, leaving enterprise operators without viable solutions.
BleedIO deploys a decentralized, self-healing mesh network architecture that is localized, edge-native, and AI-enabled, eliminating single points of failure. The system is built on open standards and is wireless-technology agnostic, allowing it to serve as an independent connectivity layer that complements — rather than replaces — existing infrastructure. More nodes improve performance rather than degrading it, making it purpose-built for dense industrial environments.
BleedIO has active paid pilots including a POC with Chevron, and pending contracts with Lufthansa, Snap-On, the DOD, and the DOE. Strategic partnerships include NVIDIA (Inception Program), AWS (POC investment), Capital Factory (equity stake/ROFR), and CDL (Creative Destruction Lab), with 4 active channel partners and 100+ on a waitlist.
See something off about this company?