Swiss IoT-powered food safety platform EEat is looking for partners to develop new traceability solutions.

Swiss IoT-powered food safety platform EEat is looking for partners to develop new traceability solutions.

Growing a startup that serves the food service industry in the midst of pandemic-driven mass closures takes courage. But this is exactly what the EEat team did after spotting a gap in the market. Working alongside customers from day one, they’ve developed an IoT-driven platform that makes it simple to comply with food safety regulations. Now they want to connect with partners to scale up and develop new traceability solutions.

Hello. Tell us a bit about yourself. 
Hi, I’m Jean-Charles Fosse. I co-founded EEat with Johann Bigler and Gaëtan Valentin back in 2019, after a fruitful exchange with Eldora, one of Switzerland’s leading caterers, helped us spot a gap in the market. Today I’m in charge of the project development.

Describe your company in a single sentence. 
EEat is a platform that uses IoT sensors and a mobile app to help food processing companies comply with food safety regulations (HACCP). We do this in three ways: by digitizing daily checks, automating cold chain management with temperature sensors and simplifying industrial traceability through QR codes.

What gets you out of bed in the morning? 
The fact that our solution really makes a difference for our customers – over 300 food service and food processing partners in Switzerland, France, Belgium and Gabon. We’re making their lives easier while ensuring that their customers remain safe. 

I also love working in a startup. Building a project from the ground up is so exciting. The whole EEat team is so focused on solving new challenges and it’s really rewarding to constantly find new ways to add value for our customers. 

What does a typical day at work look like for you? 
Every day is different! In the morning, I usually check the key numbers, make sure that everything is working as it should be and respond to customer emails. Later in the day I often have meetings with potential customers or partners or take some time to assess and rethink our strategy. We’re also in the process of recruiting new team members so it can sometimes be a challenge to juggle my team management, sales and customer support tasks. But I love how varied my role is. I never get bored! 

What were your key achievements in 2021?
Given that our clients work in the food service sector, the pandemic obviously posed some unique challenges for us! But once we’d had a chance to regroup, it actually forced us to diversify our offer and helped us reach more customers. In addition to working with restaurants, we now also support butcheries, bakeries and food processing companies. Thanks to these developments, our platform was able to measure over 9,000,000 temperature data points and facilitated over 600,000 food safety checks in 2021. 

We were also able to grow our team by recruiting to some key roles, which was extremely valuable. We’re excited to see how things progress in 2022. We’re hoping that the reduction in Covid-19 restrictions will mean more stability and less anxiety for our customers.

What are you and your team working on this year?
We’re working alongside a number of companies to improve our industrial traceability system. We want to make it possible to track each step in the food transformation chain – including food batch number and processes – from receiving the goods to the final product. We recognized that medium-sized companies were looking for a solution here but there was a gap in the market. We’re also always working on improving our existing features and UX in collaboration with key partners like Eldora. 

Tell us about how you work with others in the ecosystem to innovate.
EEat was actually born out of a collaboration with Eldora. Eldora had always been interested in our technology and how it could help them improve their processes. After a few productive meetings, we decided to work alongside them to explore how our technology could help them tackle their issues.

From day one, Eldora acted as an expert partner and openly shared their food safety knowledge with us. They took the time to train our team and talk us through their biggest challenges. We’re really grateful that they were willing to put their faith in a young startup. It was a real game changer for us. This collaboration gave us the knowledge and resources to transform EEat into a solution that could offer real value to a broader range of customers.   

But that was just the start of our journey. Each company’s food safety processes can vary significantly, so we had to make sure that the system was responsive. Given our positive experience with Eldora, we now always work alongside partners to develop new products and features. They bring their topic knowledge and we bring our technology. Then we brainstorm and come up with a solution that we can test and improve together. We aim to create the first version as quickly as possible and then iterate as needed. This could be refining the user interface or adding new features. Ultimately, the customer knows what they need best. It just makes sense to work alongside them. 

How do you support the Swiss ecosystem beyond your core business offer?
One of our most important values is to be honest and transparent. We love to find opportunities to share our experiences wherever we can. We also recognize that we’re just a small part of a huge food innovation ecosystem. That’s why we’re big fans of collaboration. Some challenges just can’t be tackled in silos. Sometimes our customers need broader support and we always do our best to connect them with suitable partners. This is always a win-win situation. 

How can the SFNV community help you achieve your goals?
We’re looking forward to the launch of Swiss Food & Nutrition Valley’s Impact Platform on Food Systems 4.0 to connect with other Valley members that are interested in developing collaborative projects in this space. We’re particularly looking to connect with small and medium size food processing companies that want to digitalize or upgrade their traceability solution.

Tell us something we didn’t know about your company.
EEat is a Spin-off of ThinkEE, an IoT-based company specialized in helping companies deal with sensors and their associated data. So that’s where the EEs in EEat come from. ThinkEE stands for: Think Ecosystem Efficiency.

Connect with Jean-Charles Fosse on LinkedIn or visit the EEat website to find out more.  

Join the Swiss Food & Nutrition Valley ecosystem and be partof the journey!

Uplyfe: An AI-powered health coach helping 40k users to eat and live smarter

Uplyfe: An AI-powered health coach helping 40k users to eat and live smarter

Valley member Uplyfe uses AI to power its precision nutrition app, which empowers individuals to take control of their health goals. We spoke with Dr Isabelle Rottman, founder and CEO, about onboarding 40k users and how actors across the food ecosystem can benefit from the platform.

Describe Uplyfe in a single sentence. 
Uplyfe is an AI-powered health and nutrition platform that allows both healthy and chronically ill users to take control of their own health, in collaboration with medical service providers.

Why did you decide to found your company?
When my dad was diagnosed with diabetes, he received a lot of conflicting advice. Healthcare providers often work in silos, making the system difficult for patients to navigate. Advice needs to be both scientific and evidence-based, as well as simple enough for the average member of the public to understand. This is where Uplyfe come in. 

And how does it work? 
The user picks a health goal that motivates them. That could be improving their diet or implementing habits like daily blood pressure checks. Our AI-powered health coach then gives them personalized advice that reacts in real time to their health data, goals and needs. Users can choose to share this data with their health providers. But we don’t give diagnoses or replace professionals. We see ourselves as part of the individual’s broader network of support. 

What gets you out of bed in the morning? 
The fact that we’re offering a solution that our users value. We’ve recently onboarded our 40,000th user. The wave of lifestyle-induced chronic diseases has made the lives of so many people more difficult. We’re doing our best to make things a little easier for them.

What are you and your team working on at the moment?
We’re currently working on introducing the option of continuous glucose measurement. The data will allow users to get real-time nutritional recommendations based on their individual blood glucose response. We’ll be able to automatically track our users’ food intake by recognizing their individual blood glucose signatures for a specific meal or food. That will eventually automate food tracking and make meaningful precision nutrition interventions much more powerful.

What achievement are you particularly proud of? 
1 in 3 users checks in daily, and 74% of our users take up a more active lifestyle as a result of using the app. Anyone who has worked in the sector will know that ‘stickiness’ is the holy grail of the app world. We seem to have stumbled across some features – like our self-scanning food feedback feature – that really work for our users and keep them coming back.

How have you collaborated with others to strengthen your offer?
We recently received CHF 350,000 from Innosuisse, the Swiss innovation agency, to test the impact of our solution. We collaborated with Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz and Luzern to confirm a correlation between app usage and positive health outcomes. We’ve also worked with CSS insurance to explore weight loss results for users with diabetes or cardiovascular conditions. We found that users typically lost 9.2% of their body weight in six months.

How can Valley members and the wider ecosystem get involved in your work?
On our B2B2C health platform we offer eight highly personalized nutritional plans covering 28 conditions, from osteoarthritis to menopause and type 2 diabetes. We’re always on the lookout for partners who are interested in offering their interventions to users in our programs or looking to develop co-funded projects. By working together we can achieve so much more than working in silos, and create personalized solutions for an even broader set of users. Please do reach out if this sounds like you!

Connect with Isabelle on LinkedIn or visit Uplyfe to find out more.  

Join the Swiss Food & Nutrition Valley ecosystem and be partof the journey!

AgroSustain kick off their commercial rollout

AgroSustain kick off their commercial rollout

AgroSustain – a rapidly growing UNIL spin-off – recently secured CHF 4.8 Million in their Series A funding round, followed by a FIT Tech Growth loan to the tune of CHF 500’000. The team has now kicked off their commercial rollout and have big plans for 2022. We sat down with Co-founder and CEO Dr Olga Dubey to find out more.

Describe your company in just a few words.
AgroSustain is a one-stop-shop solution for natural plant protection. We aim to reduce food waste and support sustainable food production by developing farm to fork solutions, like natural fungicides and coatings.

Why did you choose to set up your business in Switzerland?
I completed my doctorate at the University of Lausanne. When I discovered the natural compound that formed the basis of our products, I was so fortunate to be surrounded by a whole ecosystem of support.

Fellow SFNV member, Agroscope, were early adopters and have provided expertise and practical support from day one. They gave us access to labs and shared their expertise in running efficacy studies. Startup support through the BRIDGE, InnoTREK and Venture KIC programmes and coaching from Innosuisse has also been invaluable and helped us think through the best way to bring our product to market. Now we have our own offices in Renens and we’ve grown to a team of 12 people.

Tell us about your exciting news.
After working closely with partners to complete pilot trials over the last few years, we’ve now kicked off our commercial rollout. We’re already working with some amazing clients but we’re actively looking to connect with more growers, wholesalers and retailers who could benefit from our products. In addition to opportunities in the Swiss market, we are open for collaboration in the EU, LATAM and Africa.

The past few years have been difficult for many businesses. Have you been affected by the pandemic, for better or worse?
In early 2019, we’d just started our series A funding round. At that point we were focused on finding investors in the US and Germany who were interested in working with us to develop our natural fungicide. When the pandemic hit, we honestly thought it was all over.

But some potential clients were very positive about developing our coating solution for crops shelf-life extension. In fact, they were so eager to benefit from our product, they worked alongside us to conduct pilot trials in their premises, allowing us to monitor the crops lost and check how the coating was working, thus helping to come up with the final natural coating that protects over 15 types of fruits and vegetables. This collaboration was very immensely valuable and helped us to accelerate product development.

In reality, COVID helped us shift focus and move forward much faster than we would’ve done if we’d have stayed focused on the fungicide alone. It typically takes 5-7 years to get approvals in this space.

What have you learned along the way?
So much! We’ve learnt how to be agile. When you’re just setting out everything seems mission impossible. But I suppose this is always the case when you’re trying to develop something new. We’ve found that if you really listen to what your market is telling you, things start to fall into place.

One of our biggest learnings was around growing a team. Finding the right team is critical. It’s so important to find someone who shares your vision. As your team grows, you also need to learn to hire the right people who have complementary skills. Then you need to become a good manager and build a positive team culture. I was really fortunate to recruit an excellent management team that has a strong track record and really shares the vision I have for the business.

How would you like to support others in the Swiss food innovation ecosystem?
We’d be really interested in sharing our learnings with start-ups who are just setting up. We were really fortunate to benefit from the extraordinary support from other actors in the ecosystem. Now I’d like to share this knowledge to help others who are going through the same challenges. I’m actually speaking to the SFNV team about how we can use the Valley community to do this, alongside other members – watch this space!

What support could the SFNV community offer to aid collaboration in your sector?
We’re actively looking to grow our network and establish long-term relationships with clients – growers, wholesalers and retailers. We’d also be really interested in connecting with colleagues in larger businesses, like Firmenich and Givaudan to benefit from their experience in corporate strategy.

What’s next for Agrosustain?
This year, we’ll be focusing on our market extension. We’ll also be looking to raise another 5 million to accelerate the rollout. If you’re interested in joining us on this journey, I’d love to hear from you.

Connect with Olga to find out more or visit the Agrosustain website

Join the Swiss Food & Nutrition Valley ecosystem and be partof the journey!

Allcook.kitchen: serving low-waste, chef-crafted meals to 1,000+ tables across Switzerland

Allcook.kitchen: serving low-waste, chef-crafted meals to 1,000+ tables across Switzerland

Valley member Allcook.kitchen delivers low-waste, restaurant-quality meals to homes across Switzerland. A year after dispatching their first meals, the company is delivering to 1,000+ customers. We spoke with co-founder Sacha Thorey about the company’s commitment to local food, artisan partnerships and low-waste ethos.

Describe your company in a single sentence.
At Allcook.kitchen we deliver high-quality, restaurant-grade meals that are healthy and delicious, in innovative, low-waste packaging, to customers on a weekly basis.

What inspired you to launch your company?
Before our service launched, chef-cooked meals at home were only attainable for wealthy customers who could afford a private cook. We wanted to change that through a direct-to-consumer subscription model and vacuum-packing technology to guarantee freshness and flavour.

What gets you out of bed in the morning?
Three things. The tremendous responsibility that comes with feeding over 1,000 Swiss households. The fact that we’re producing food that is local, sustainable and low-waste. And the great feedback we get from our customers. One review simply stated: “Thank you for existing”. That was pretty motivating!

What’s different about your service?
We believe that plant-based nutrition is the future – and that businesses play an important role in helping consumers to shift their nutritional habits. In behavioural science, they call it “removing friction”. If someone wants to make a change, solutions should make it as easy as possible to do so. Only 5% of our customers are vegetarians, the rest are omnivores. But our meal choices are 40% vegetarian and vegan. We aim to create delicious plant-based recipes that even meat lovers will choose and enjoy.

What are you and your team working on at the moment?
We are almost constantly in ‘developing new recipes’ mode. We offer menus that change weekly, so we have to strike the delicate balance between food that works for weeknight meals and dishes that treat our clients – something that they can’t cook themselves.

Packaging innovation is also a big focus. We recently launched meals in compostable vacuum sachets made from corn. This allows customers to dispose of the packaging at home in an environmentally responsible way, while ensuring that meals retain their natural flavours and moisture.

What have you learnt in the last 12 months?
It’s important to have the right mix of skills in your team. We’re really fortunate here – my co-founder (and husband) Benoit has the culinary skills, Andrey takes care of web development and I lead on marketing. We’ve also learnt to iterate quickly based on customers’ feedback and achieve more with less.

Tell us about how you collaborate with others in the Swiss ecosystem.
We want to use Allcook.kitchen as a platform to showcase innovative local suppliers. For example, we partner with Terra Soja, an organic tofu brand made in Vaud. The chef, Madam Kim, combines traditional Korean cooking with exceptional Swiss quality. We see this as a real win-win situation. Artisan producers get to boost the visibility of their products and reach consumers across Switzerland, and we get to treat our customers to the latest, tastiest, locally-made products.

What support could the SFNV community offer to help you achieve your goals?
We’re keen to build a meaningful network with like-minded people who are passionate about nutrition and minimizing food and plastic waste. As the year progresses, we’ll also be looking for funding to scale. We’d love to hear from anyone interested in finding out more about what we do.

Share something we didn’t know about your company.
The subscription business model allows us to plan our production cycle up to one portion precision. As a result, we’re proud to say that we produce no avoidable food waste. As we scale, we should also be able to reduce waste in the value chain below us.

Connect with Sacha on LinkedIn or find out more on the Allcook.kitchen website.

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Swiss scaleup Ecorobotix gears up for further European expansion

Swiss scaleup Ecorobotix gears up for further European expansion

After securing CHF 13.2 million in one of Vaud’s largest funding rounds last year and ranking in the FoodTech 500, Ecorobotix is preparing to ramp up its European expansion in 2022. But as their list of international distributors grows, this dedicated B Corp continues to invest in strengthening the Swiss innovation ecosystem. 

Hello, tell us a bit about yourself. 
I’m Steve Tanner, CTO and co-founder of Ecorobotix. After growing up on a farm, I studied and worked at EPFL as research team lead in microelectronics. The idea of Ecorobotix came to me when I was thinking through how to use robotics and AI to improve agriculture’s environmental impact. 

What gets you out of bed in the morning?
Knowing that we have the technology to really make a difference – to improve farmers’ livelihoods by increasing profitability, to make it easier to produce healthier food, while reducing agriculture’s environmental impact.

What do you do at Ecorobotix in just a few words?
Ecorobotix creates smart spraying solutions for ultra-localized treatments of row crops, pastures and lawns and can be used all year long. Our technology is the most precise sprayer on the market and is developed on a plant-by-plant basis.  

As Chief Technical Officer, I’m in charge of product development and technical innovation by leading the research and development team – currently a team of 16 people. We develop everything in-house, including mechanics, fluidics, electronics, and software. I’m in charge of supervising all these developments, setting up collaborations with research partners to support our innovation, and protecting our intellectual property by filing patents.

What does your typical work day look like?
I tend to have three or four meetings every day. In the morning I could be discussing strategic decisions with the management team and coordinating R&D activities with my managers. Then, as the day progresses, I might spend some time talking with specific engineers to explore technical issues and provide guidance and support.

What key milestones did you hit in 2021?
Last year, we were working with ten machines alongside clients in Switzerland. We successfully raised CHF 13.2 million in our Series C funding round in June to help us keep up with demand. The recently launched Swiss Venture Capital report revealed that this actually put us in top ten funding rounds in Vaud Canton. 

What are your plans for Ecorobotix in 2022?
We’re focussing on expanding our distribution network. We currently have official distributors in France, Holland, Czech Republic, Italy and Germany. 

The funding secured last year will allow us to accelerate the high-volume series production of our ARA plant protection spraying machine and drive our European expansion. This year, we’ll have 70 machines ready to deploy. We’re already working on a few pilot projects in Greece and are very open to discussions with new partners. 

We’re also working closely with academic partners to measure the impact of our work. A recent field test on onions in France showed that our solutions allowed for a decrease in the quantity of chemical products used, a significant reduction of residue and phytotoxicity on crops and fewer losses. These echo the promising results we found in our previous trials on beans and sugar beet.

How do you collaborate and support others in the ecosystem?
We support the wider agtech and innovation ecosystem in a number of ways. We enjoy welcoming students for internships, which contributes to the number of qualified and experienced people in the Swiss job market. We also take part in agtech and foodtech events, boosting the food sector’s visibility and highlighting the vital role of sustainability in this industry.

We’re also currently in discussion with an EPFL lab to make our autonomous field robotic platform available to researchers developing projects in digital agriculture. Our first solar-powered platform is really well suited for autonomous robot missions for field tasks, such as data scouting, phenotyping, and agronomic operations at a feasibility stage. We’d like this platform to be an open project to foster academic activity in this field.

What support could the SFNV community offer to further your work?
We’re always looking to connect with partners who are interested in setting up pilot projects. We’re specifically looking for collaborations in plant disease detection and application of fertilizers.

Tell us something we might not know about your company.
I’ll tell you two! For each crop our solutions support, we need to take 100,000 photos! Based on these images, our robots start to recognise the crop and adapt how they react automatically. 

As a team, we’re also committed to walking the talk on sustainability. In addition to being certified as a B Corp, all our 40 employees take half a day off each year to get involved in a practical environmental project. Last year we helped to maintain a dry grassland. This year we’re open to suggestions! 

Connect with Steve or find out more on the Ecorobotix website

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PhytlSigns by Vivent: The ‘FitBit of Plants’ using tech to tap into plant signalling

PhytlSigns by Vivent: The ‘FitBit of Plants’ using tech to tap into plant signalling

Vivent is a Swiss leader in plant electrophysiology, cleverly using tech to turn plant intelligence into business intelligence. We caught up with Marina Martin Curran, Vivent’s Sustainability Manager, to find out more about their groundbreaking technology system PhytlSigns that’s been called the ‘FitBit of Plants’, and their recent certification as a B Corp.

Describe your company in a single sentence.
PhytlSigns is a pioneering technology system developed by our team here at Vivent which provides early warnings of a wide range of crop stressors, well before visual symptoms, enabling growers to increase yields and to choose environmentally preferable crop protection.

What gets you out of bed in the morning?
We’re really proud to be playing our part in transforming the future of agriculture, delivering safe and secure food for everyone, with a reduced environmental impact. 

What projects or innovations are you and your team working on at the moment?
Our company, Vivent SA, just received a growth loan worth 500,000 CHF from the Foundation for Technological Innovation (FIT). This will allow us to develop and launch a second plant monitoring system aimed at larger fields and greenhouses. We’ll now also be looking to finalise and launch PhytlSigns Scout, a smaller, cheaper, wireless and more convenient plant monitoring system.

Vivent Team photo

Tell us about one of your open innovation success stories.
Plant researchers at Agroscope, another SFNV member, are currently using PhytlSigns to measure the responses of tomatoes and aubergines to stressors, insect attacks and agrochemical use, and to track changes of nectar production in flowering plants. We’ve been working with Agroscope for some time, thanks to Innosuisse and OFAG funding that allowed us to collaborate to identify the signals that plants produce when different stressors are applied. Thanks to machine learning we’ve been able to train algorithms for these different stressors which can then be deployed commercially to support more sustainable agriculture.

We’ve also been successful in obtaining an NTN Innobooster Award and will be working with Agroscope on potatoes in storage. This project aims to reduce the amounts of germination inhibitors that are sprayed on potatoes during the storage period.

How do you support the Swiss ecosystem beyond your core business offer?
We’re always willing to engage with other stakeholders. We’re already working with researchers from other companies to improve and hone how PhytlSigns works in practice. In addition to our collaboration with Agroscope, we’ve also worked with the schools of Applied Sciences in Fribourg and Yverdon. We’d really like to connect with other members of the Swiss ecosystem to support their work and to accelerate our own product development. We’re always open to hearing from anyone who’s interested in collaborating!

What support could the SFNV community offer to help you achieve your goals?
We are particularly eager to connect with agritech companies, vertical or indoor farm operators, greenhouse growers, producers of biostimulants and other novel crop protection. And we’re actively looking for support to enter the greenhouse market in Switzerland.

Tell us a fun fact or something we didn’t know about your company.
We recently received news that Vivent has been awarded B Corp status! To become a B Corp, we had to meet rigorous social and environmental standards – and it’s not a one-time thing. We have to apply to be recertified every three years. So you could say we’ve truly committed to a process that privileges continuous improvement and ever higher standards. But that’s something we’re glad to be able to do. We want to do business in a meaningful way and pursue purpose as well as profit. We’re also in good company, as fellow SFNV members Ecorobotix and CleanGreens, are also Swiss B Corps!

To find out more about Vivent’s work, or explore collaboration opportunities, contact Marina at marina.curran@vivent.ch

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