Commune raises seeds worth $ 8 million to help find missing food supplies

One day Shashwat Murark sat in his apartment in College, considering about his relationship with the delivery of food. Sometimes the order never got here and he had to wander around his apartment, looking for the unsuitable food. At other times he gave step by step suggestions to confused suppliers, who, because it seemed, were as annoyed as he did.

“What began as frustration turned into a mission to solve one of the most overlooked problems in the supply chain, the last episode of the last mile,” said Techcrunch. He began studying the supply chain, conducted deliveries himself and decided during the last 12 months in college to deal with the problem.

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He joined forces with his friend Sheel Patel and fired In the doorstep to help track delivery. Muraka, who is the general director, said that the GPS standard works miracles outside, but fails in buildings, which creates dead fields for suppliers.

Houses integrate with existing supply applications, and then, using telephone sensors, follows when the driver entered the building, went to the elevator and reached the desired threshold.

These data are transmitted to the delivery platform, on which the controller operates, similar to Uber Eats or Dordash, and then could be used to automate disputes and accurately check the validation of deliveries, mainly ending with the drama with missing food and blurred photos. Muraka said that the company does not collect information about the controller or the user and that it maintains “the same platforms of privacy and security standards”.

“Our technology gives customer service teams visibility, which was missing, providing in real time, verifiable data on what is actually happening in buildings to automatically solve phrases,” said Muraka. “The solution to this dead point unlocks enormous value for platforms, controllers, merchants and customers.”

On Thursday, the company announced a $ 8 million seed round run by Canan Partners. Muraka described the collection of funds as “relentless” and said that he was actually sleeping in the Accelerator Aronter office when he first moved to New York.

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(*8*) he continued. “People who do not only want to watch travel but want to be part of it and stay on the course.”

He said that Domesep raised this round in about a week and that he met their important investor in Cannan through network connections. Others in this round are Antler, Cercano Management, Cassius and Sean Henry, a scout in Kleiner Perkins. Muraka said that the fresh capital can be used to transfer technology from the handheld remote control to full production. He also wants to employ engineering and product.

Muraka considers the company’s competitors to be other equipment based on equipment, similar to standard building sensors, cabinets and cameras. “The equipment is expensive and slow on a scale, while GPS simply does not work in the room,” he said. The company is already lively in all US states, although it refused to provide names with clients.

Muraka hopes that his company can end the pain associated with the missing food supply.

“For me, it’s not just about stopping fraud or phrases. It’s about rebuilding trust between platforms and clients and between drivers and the work they do,” he said. “Drivers are the spine of delivery platforms, and after experiencing these challenges, we hope to facilitate their work.”

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