Singapore-based Doozy Robotics is expanding across the United States, the Gulf Cooperation Council region and Asia as it prepares for a planned Series A fundraising round. The company, founded by Suresh Chandrasekar and Ajmal Thahseen, develops autonomous systems for industrial operations. Its platform includes an Industrial Super Humanoid, Autonomous Mobile Robots and Autonomous Forklifts, coordinated through its proprietary orchestration layer, Eywa-OS. The software is designed to interpret production goals, allocate robots and humanoids across factory floors and adjust operations when disruptions occur.
Doozy Robotics said its Industrial Super Humanoid is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of 2026, with initial deployments expected to begin after the launch. The company is backed by investors including Cocoon Capital. The company is targeting manufacturers and industrial operators facing labor constraints. It cited projections that labor shortages could contribute to more than $1 trillion in negative GDP impact in the United States by 2030, along with demographic shifts in the American workforce.
“The global labor shortage is a structural shift, not a temporary imbalance,” said Suresh Chandrasekar, chief executive officer and co-founder of Doozy Robotics. “We are building the Physical AI workforce that will power the next era of manufacturing. By combining humanoids, autonomous systems, and Eywa-OS orchestration, we are enabling facilities to operate with intelligence at scale. This expansion into the U.S. marks a critical step towards that vision.”
Doozy Robotics is offering its systems through a Robot-as-a-Service model, under which customers subscribe to an integrated autonomous workforce on a monthly basis rather than buying hardware outright. The model is intended to allow customers to scale the number of humanoids and robots according to production demand.
The company said it has a qualified global pipeline of more than $200 million, a $144 million memorandum of understanding with an industrial conglomerate and a pilot involving humanoid deployments with a U.S. pharmaceutical company. It also said it has paying customers across two continents, with engagements involving Daimler, Carrier and VitaQuest.
Michael Blakey, managing partner at Cocoon Capital, said Doozy Robotics has customers deploying its systems in warehouses and factories. “They have cracked some of the most persistent bottlenecks in industrial robotics, such as seamlessly navigating uneven floors and disorganized spaces, and reducing the operational footprint by 50% compared to traditional forklifts,” Blakey said.
