One robot. One trained operator. Less work for both, over time.
Safra pairs a machine that's good at the physical part with a person who's good at the judgment part — then quietly hands the routine motions to the machine. Here's what that looks like in practice, and what it takes to try it.
Where the work happens, and where the worker is.
A robot on your floor
We place a task-specific robot at your site — a manipulator that stocks and faces, or a lifter that moves boxes and totes. It's built for the one job it's there to do, so it's lighter and cheaper than a general-purpose machine, and it doesn't ask you to rebuild your space around it.
An operator anywhere
A trained operator drives that robot over the network on a normal shift. When the task needs a decision — is this item damaged, is this the right unit, is the shelf actually full — a person is making it in real time. One operator can also switch between robots as the work allows.
You pay by the robot-hour.
No hardware to buy
The robot, the operator and the software come as one service. There's no capital outlay and nothing on your balance sheet to depreciate.
Hours flex with demand
Run more hours through a peak week and fewer after it. You're paying for the work that happens, not for a headcount you have to keep busy.
The rate trends down
As automation absorbs the repetitive motions, the same task takes less operator time — and the cost of covering it falls with it.
Short, low-commitment, and built to give you a real answer.
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Call 01
Intro conversation
Thirty minutes. You describe the task you can't keep covered; we tell you honestly whether it's a fit for remote operation today or further up the ladder.
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Week 01
Site walk & scoping
We look at the floor, the task and the constraints — space, hours, safety, and the network conditions the robot will actually run on — and agree on one task to prove.
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Weeks 2–4
Live pilot
A robot runs your chosen task on real shifts with a trained operator. You see the work get done, and we measure how it compares to your current way of covering it.
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After
Review & decide
We sit down with the numbers: cost per task, reliability, and where automation can take it next. You decide whether to continue, expand, or walk away — no lock-in.
Not much — a task, some space, and a connection.
- One repeatable task you'd be glad to take off a person's plate.
- Floor space for the robot to work, and a power outlet nearby.
- A network connection at the site — we test the real conditions before anything goes live.
- A point of contact who can answer questions during the pilot.
Safety and insurance are worked out before any robot goes live. We won't put a machine on your floor we can't stand behind.
The things operators ask first.
Do I have to buy or install anything?
What about safety and insurance?
What happens if the connection drops?
Will this replace my team?
How quickly can a pilot start?
See it run on your floor.
Bring us the task you'd most like to hand off. A first conversation is short and costs nothing.