Atonix Digital using predictive analytics to tackle Black & Veatch first, then the world

February 11, 2019  |  Elyssa Bezner

Atonix Digital Black & Veatch

Black & Veatch offshoot Atonix Digital is re-engineering the future of its parent company’s customer base, said Paul McRoberts.

Developed to offer software solutions to customers from Black & Veatch’s existing market sectors — power, water, and telecommunications — Atonix has the opportunity to move beyond its specific corporate origins to service other industries, said McRoberts, president of Overland Park-based data analytics firm, which operates as a wholly owned subsidiary of Black & Veatch.

Atonix Digital

Paul McRoberts, Atonix Digital

“With Atonix, we could end up getting into things like pharmaceuticals, and into other markets where Black & Veatch doesn’t naturally play today,” he said.

After the Atonix experiment, Black & Veatch could choose to build other subsidiaries as consultancies — in design, development or construction — to further service its clients and “change the entire outlook of what Black & Veatch looks like in the future,” he added.

Click here to learn more about Atonix.

Backed by Black & Veatch, Atonix operates with a startup mentality despite the “mature development environment” of the Overland Park-based engineering giant, he added.

“We’re not wet behind the ears,” said McRoberts, noting Atonix’s founding in January 2018.

Atonix saves its partners millions of dollars using predictive analytics based in artificial intelligence and machine learning-backed software, he said.

The company hit the ground running after its founding with five years’ worth of structure from Black & Veatch’s previous data work for customers, McRoberts explained, noting the corporate entity now provides Atonix with use of its 24/7 monitoring and diagnostics center.

“We also have a wealth of access to the marketplaces through Black & Veatch — they are, in fact, our biggest [value-added reseller],” said McRoberts. Other resellers will be needed once the Black & Veatch rubric no longer applies in industries like pharmaceuticals and food and beverage, he added.

“Atonix is not a call center within Black & Veatch,” he said. Though the corporate entity is currently Atonix’s sole funder, steps were made to ensure the relationship operates like any standard investment, McRoberts said.

Joining ranks with 14 other startups that comprise the Black & Veatch family, McRoberts initially had reservations about the possibility of being swallowed up by a corporate identity and becoming closed off, he admitted.  

Click here to read about Black and Veatch’s first consumer product, Solarhood.

Atonix Digital team

“Steve Edwards, the CEO [of Black & Veatch,] was the first one to turn around and say, ‘You are going to be treated differently and you are going to be looked at differently. If we’re getting in the way, you need to let us know so we can get out of your way,’” McRoberts added.

Atonix stakeholders endeavor to stay in touch with the startup community and maintain connections with local research facilities, said McRoberts, adding the company nearly doubled its size in 2018, aiming to bring in younger people with minds for modern math and software techniques.

“We are pushing the limits of predictive analytics to understand what’s going to happen in the future to then help companies know what the best thing to do is with their assets today,” he said.

Current efforts are centered on democratizing Atonix services to allow for smaller-scale customers, said McRoberts, noting competitors today seem to be “going after the largest of the large.”

“When you start moving down the street, you quickly go from having massive systems that cost millions of dollars to deploy, to people using Excel,” he said. “We’re looking to deliver for the larger facilities that want to deploy [our services] at an enterprise level, but also provide for small and medium size businesses.”

Though Atonix’s fate is tied to the strategy of Black & Veatch, an overarching vision for Atonix involves a future where understanding data and streamlining analytics helps businesses across the world, he added.

“We are geared toward solving this bigger problem around data and data analytics, really getting ahold of the economic value of assets, and what they bring to a company, and taking a whole different approach to what I call traditional operations, maintenance, and asset management,” said McRoberts.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Neighborhood smart cans help Kansas Citians save the planet from their kitchens

        By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2025

        Newly introduced composting technology is already turning new ground in Kansas City, Kristan Chamberlain said, with more solar-powered compost cans arriving later this spring across the metro’s urban landscape. Her social venture, KC Can Compost, installed three of the devices in October — free to use for KCMO residents wanting to deposit their soil-making food…

        Voodoo Volleyball bounces back in OP: Father-daughter duo doubles as new venture’s setters

        By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2025

        Quinn Austin put several sports to the test as a preteen — racing from basketball practice to softball to volleyball. But she latched on to just one. “Volleyball. It was my sport. Everyone was having a good time,” she said. “We just loved the cheers — a cheer when we got a hit, a cheer…

        Black farmers are losing ground in the fight to feed their communities, advocates say

        By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

        More than a century of systemic land dispossession and discriminatory practices has left Black farmers with less than 0.6 percent of U.S. farmland — less than a third of the 16 million acres they operated in 1910, according to local urban farming advocates.  They gathered Tuesday at Independence Boulevard Christian Church to confront this history…

        Cracking egg-flation: How farmers, substitute ingredients help restaurants mitigate price spike

        By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

        Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the Kansas City Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert. Click here to read the original story. Whether ordering an omelet, French toast, chicken n’ biscuits, chilaquiles, corned beef hash…