In a year when many tech companies are reining in spending, Voxel is going full throttle. The San Francisco-based computer vision startup—known for using AI to reduce workplace injuries—has announced a wave of momentum, including major executive hires, a new Chicago office, and deployments in seven new countries. Oh, and it just signed six Fortune 500 companies—all in a single quarter.
The surge comes on the heels of Voxel’s $44 million Series B earlier this year and signals the company’s evolution from high-potential startup to a serious contender shaping the future of industrial safety.
Building a C-Suite for Global Scale
As Voxel moves to capitalize on increasing enterprise demand, it’s bolstering its leadership team with strategic hires across technology, marketing, sales, finance, and customer operations. Among the new appointments:
-
Bryan O’Sullivan, Chief Technology Officer
-
Allan Malcolm, Chief Marketing Officer
-
Jessica Schroeder, VP of Finance
-
Mike Berg, Regional VP of Sales
-
Brittany DeRafelo, Director of Customer Solutions
This team will be instrumental as the company works to scale its AI-driven platform across industries like manufacturing, logistics, energy, and construction—where workplace safety is a mission-critical function and margins are razor thin.
AI Safety Moves from Reactive to Proactive
Voxel’s platform uses computer vision and real-time analytics to monitor worksites for unsafe behaviors, potential hazards, and near misses—turning reactive incident reporting into proactive risk prevention.
The results? Enterprise customers are reporting up to 91% fewer recordable injuries and millions in direct cost savings, reinforcing the business case for investing in workplace safety as a competitive advantage—not just a compliance checkbox.
The industry is taking notice.
Fortune 500 Adoption and Global Rollout
In 2025 alone, Voxel has secured six new Fortune 500 clients—an impressive signal that its AI platform is no longer a niche solution. These multinational firms are not only adopting Voxel domestically but also driving global standardization of AI-powered safety across operations.
As a result, Voxel has expanded into Malaysia, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, and Italy, with Germany and Australia next on deck. That kind of scale in a single year is rare, even for well-funded startups, and it hints at massive momentum within the industrial AI space.
New Chicago Hub Anchors U.S. Growth
To better serve customers in the Midwest and Sun Belt, Voxel has opened a new office in Chicago’s River North neighborhood. The office will house sales, marketing, operations, and customer success teams as the company strengthens regional support and customer experience across the U.S.
This physical expansion reflects Voxel’s growing commitment to being close to the large-scale industrial customers driving its next phase of growth.
The Bottom Line
While many AI startups are still pitching pilot programs, Voxel is already showing enterprise-level impact. Its combination of machine vision, actionable insights, and global execution gives it a unique edge in the emerging market for AI-powered EHS (environmental, health, and safety) platforms.
With a deepened bench of leadership talent, a growing global footprint, and real-world results from some of the world’s largest employers, Voxel is making a strong case for itself as the future of workplace safety—and doing it with urgency.
Join thousands of HR leaders who rely on HRTechEdge for the latest in workforce technology, AI-driven HR solutions, and strategic insights





