Black & Veatch spinout gives Atonix Digital the startup space to scale on its own
February 23, 2021 | Channa Steinmetz
A newly independent Atonix Digital is leaning into growth opportunities after being spun out of its corporate home at Black & Veatch earlier this year.
“The benefit to Black & Veatch is: they get to stay on their core business model. The benefit to Atonix Digital is: we get to be more nimble, pursue new industries and grow our partner network,” said Matt Kirchner, who serves as the chief product officer for Atonix Digital.
Elevator pitch: Atonix Digital is a computer software company that helps plant managers and operators improve operations by detecting, diagnosing and resolving issues to avoid unplanned shutdowns, improve asset efficiency and gain insight into asset performance. Unlike other analytics software, the Atonix Platform is built for asset experts rather than data scientists and drives a process that ensures issue resolution rather than simply identifying them.
Leadership team: Paul McRoberts, chief executive officer; Jacque Hansen, chief financial officer and chief marketing officer; Brian Schumacher, chief technology officer; Matt Kirchner, chief product officer
Founding year: 2018
Amount raised to date: Undisclosed
Noteworthy investors: Undisclosed
Current employee count: Undisclosed
Black & Veatch announced in January it was selling its wholly owned subsidiary — a startup-style company within the engineering firm — to the Atonix leadership team.
Atonix Digital is an Overland Park-based software company focused on operational intelligence; the company’s products are powered by ASSET360 — a cloud-based data analytics platform that improves the efficiency of operations and planning for complex and distributed assets, according to its website.
Click here to learn more about Atonix Digital’s analytics platform.
Although breaking away from Black & Veatch during a global pandemic might seem like faulty timing, Kirchner explained, Atonix Digital was not strongly affected by the pandemic — and was even impacted favorably because of its stronger reliance on technology.
“Because we provide hosted software that gives our users insight into the operations of their facility, users can leverage our software from wherever they are and still keep an eye on their operating assets,” Kirchner explained. “So as our customers became more distributed, they leaned into our software even more to keep an eye on their facilities from a distance.”
As a newly independent software company, Atonix Digital is able to target industries outside of Black & Veatch’s engineering focus, Kirchner noted.
“Our heritage came out of power generation, and that still represents a fair amount of our business,” he said. “But our growth areas — where I think we will continue to grow this year — have really been oil and gas, petrochemical, and pulp and paper. Water and wastewater and other manufacturing [industries] are still interesting to us.”
Atonix Digital anticipates some hiring growth in 2021, Kirchner noted. The team’s main goals are to expand and serve new types of facilities, as well as work with a larger network of partners.
Black & Veatch will remain a partner with Atonix Digital and continue to leverage Atonix’s software to remotely monitor facilities.
“When we go to market with the Black & Veatch team, it’s a combination of their engineering services plus our software that forms a complete solution,” Kirchner explained. “So we offer our software through our partner network — where our partners can provide complimentary services with our software — and we offer our software to customers who want to be the user of our software directly.”
High efficiency and effectiveness are the pillars of what sets Atonix Digital’s software apart from other solutions, Kirchner noted.
“We can get our software up and fully operational a lot faster than our competitors; we’re up and running in six-to-eight weeks,” he said. “The other thing that customers speak highly about is that our software drives a process. It doesn’t just use analytics and math for the sake of math. We’re using our analytics to detect, diagnose and resolve issues.”
Although growing into more industries is the goal for 2021, advancing its software will maintain at the forefront of Atonix Digital’s priorities, Kirchner added.
“Much of our strategy is a continuation of what it was before,” he shared. “Helping industrial customers prevent failures, reduce production downtime and operate more efficiently are what we aim to accomplish when enhancing our software. We’re still heavily invested in improving how we do that.”
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
At 13, he begged his mother to let him cook; now this Blue Valley teen runs a creperie on wheels
Last Christmas, Karizma Nola and his family took a trip to Colorado where they came across the most unforgettable crepes, he recalled. This holiday season, Nola has a spatula in hand as he shares his own culinary passion with Kansas City. “I’ve always thought about being an entrepreneur; I just didn’t expect it to happen…
KC startup Pepper secures deal to create new IoT platform with investment from Comcast
The merging of a homegrown IoT startup’s tech and a corporate innovator’s existing smart property management system is expected to accelerate growth for Kansas City-built Pepper, said Scott Ford. The companies on Wednesday announced Pepper and Notion — Comcast’s insurtech business unit — had joined to create a new IoT and smart home platform that…
A KC family created Wish-Bone Italian Dressing for its fried chicken restaurant; it became an iconic American staple
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. For more stories like this one, subscribe to Hungry For MO on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. In 1948, Phillip Sollomi debuted an Italian vinaigrette at his…
New hard cider brewery in Crossroads plucks inspiration from family farm, Midwest fruit industry
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. Russ John of Brick River Cider Co. has a modest goal for his new place in the East Crossroads.…
