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Ivaldi Group

ServiceSan Leandro, CA, USAFounded 2016· One of 2010 Service companies tracked by AMPulse

Provides an end-to-end digital supply chain and on-demand manufacturing service platform for heavy industry, enabling companies to identify, digitize, and locally produce spare parts via additive manufacturing.

CEO / Founder
Espen Sivertsen
Team Size
11-50
Stage
Growth Stage
Total Funding
$5.2M
Latest Round
Seed
Key Investors
SAP.iO; Farvatn Venture; Norselab; Wilhelmsen

Technology & Products

Key Products

Digital supply chain solution; On-demand manufacturing service; Digital inventory management platform

Technological Advantage

Combines software-driven supply chain analysis with a distributed manufacturing network to address the practical bottleneck of integrating digital spare parts into existing procurement workflows. Their advantage is a data-driven, facility-specific strategy that accounts for local regulations and logistics, moving beyond generic AM suitability assessments.

Differentiation

Value Proposition

Reduces spare parts logistics costs, lead times, and carbon footprint by shifting from centralized warehousing to digital inventory and local on-demand production, sending files instead of parts.

How They Differentiate

Focuses exclusively on the service layer of digital supply chain management for spare parts in heavy industry, unlike pure-play hardware manufacturers or general 3D printing bureaus. Their differentiation is a holistic approach combining data analytics, digitization services, and a networked production model tailored to complex industrial environments.

Market & Competition

Target Customers

Heavy industry operators in maritime, mining, energy, and automotive sectors requiring spare parts.

Industry Verticals

Maritime; Mining; Energy; Automotive

Competitors

DiManEx; Spare Parts 3D

Growth & Milestones

Growth Metrics

Has deployed its platform with over 30 industrial customers, including major players like Maersk, Wilhelmsen, and Carnival Corporation, and has digitized over 1,000 unique spare parts for on-demand production.

Major Milestones

ISO certification achieved within 10 months of operation; Partnership with Wilhelmsen to create in-port AM micro-factory in Singapore; Collaboration with Anglo American and CSIR on 3D printing spare parts in South Africa; Agreement with Alaska Ocean Cluster to explore digitized supply chains

Notable Customers

Wilhelmsen; Anglo American

Recent coverage of Ivaldi Group

Why this company matters

Ivaldi Group operates a digital supply chain and on-demand manufacturing platform tailored to heavy industry spare parts. The company shifts the logistics model from shipping physical inventory to sending digital files for local production, targeting reductions in lead times, warehousing costs, and carbon footprint. Its proprietary data analysis methodology has assessed over 2.3 million parts representing $1.6 billion in annual expenditure to identify which components are viable for additive manufacturing.

The platform combines software for part identification and digitization with a distributed manufacturing network. Ivaldi's tiered data capture process digitizes physical components, and its system bridges part identification to decentralized production execution. The approach accounts for facility-specific regulations and logistics, moving beyond generic AM suitability assessments to deliver a practical integration into existing procurement workflows.

Ivaldi serves heavy industry operators in maritime, mining, energy, and automotive sectors. Named customers include Wilhelmsen and Anglo American, and the platform has been deployed with over 30 industrial clients including Maersk and Carnival Corporation. Over 1,000 unique spare parts have been digitized for on-demand production. Key partnerships include the Alaska Ocean Cluster and CSIR in South Africa, and the company has raised $5.2 million from investors including SAP.iO, Farvatn Venture, Norselab, and Wilhelmsen.

Ivaldi's competitive moat lies in its service-layer focus on digital spare parts supply chains for heavy industry, differentiating it from pure-play hardware manufacturers or general 3D printing bureaus. Competitors include DiManEx and Spare Parts 3D. The open question is whether Ivaldi can scale its facility-specific deployment model across more geographies and industries faster than incumbents or in-house solutions from large operators.