Doozy Robotics, the Singapore-based physical artificial intelligence (AI) humanoid company building autonomous industrial workforces, announced Thursday a coordinated global expansion across the United States, GCC, and Asia, marking its next phase of growth ahead of a planned Series A.
The startup said in a statement that it is backed by investors including Cocoon Capital, who have supported the company through a period of great commercial traction.
Founded by Suresh Chandrasekar and Ajmal Thahseen, Doozy is building a vertically integrated ecosystem rather than selling isolated machines.
The platform combines an Industrial Super Humanoid, a fleet of Autonomous Mobile Robots, and Autonomous Forklifts, all coordinated by the company’s proprietary orchestration layer, Eywa-OS.
Designed to function as a super-intelligent factory manager, Eywa-OS governs the entire operation: it interprets high-level production goals, dynamically allocates humanoids and robots across the floor, and adapts to disruptions in real time.
The Industrial Super Humanoid is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of 2026, with first deployments beginning soon after.
The expansion comes against the backdrop of a structural, generational labor shortage that now extends well beyond aging economies.
In the United States, labor constraints are projected to contribute to over $1 trillion by 2030 in negative gross domestic product (GDP) impact, nearly half of American workers are over 45, and Gen Z accounts for just 8 percent of the workforce.
Doozy is positioning itself as the first scalable agentic industrial workforce built for this reality.
“The global labor shortage is a structural shift, not a temporary imbalance,
“We are building the Physical AI workforce that will power the next era of manufacturing,” said Suresh Chandrasekar, Chief Executive Officer and Co-founder of Doozy Robotics.
By combining humanoids, autonomous systems, and Eywa-OS orchestration, he said the firm is enabling facilities to operate with intelligence at scale.
“This expansion into the U.S. marks a critical step towards that vision,” he added.
According to the statement, the company is also extending the Robot-as-a-Service model to a full multi-agent ecosystem.
Instead of purchasing hardware outright, customers subscribe to an integrated autonomous workforce on a monthly basis and can scale humanoids and robots up or down as production demand shift – turning factory automation from a heavy capital expenditure into an elastic operational service.
Doozy said it has reached early commercial milestones at seed stage, including a qualified global pipeline of more than US$200 million and a memorandum of understanding (MOU) worth about US$144 million with a major industrial conglomerate.
The company also said it is conducting a large-scale pilot involving humanoid deployments with a US pharmaceutical company.
It added that it has paying customers across two continents, with engagements including Daimler, Carrier and VitaQuest.
“We have been incredibly impressed by the sheer velocity of Doozy Robotics’ traction to date,
“Already having global customers actively deploying these systems across their warehouses and factories is a testament to the team’s execution,” said Michael Blakey, Managing Partner at Cocoon Capital.
According to him, Doozy Robotics has 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.
“Most importantly, they are delivering this advanced capability at a price point that makes mass-market adoption inevitable. It is a truly impressive leap forward for the industry,” he added.
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