Fortune | FORTUNE 10月14日 17:59
Flow Engineering获2300万美元A轮融资,重塑硬件设计新范式
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Flow Engineering是一家旨在解决复杂工程挑战并促进敏捷迭代硬件开发的初创公司,近日宣布完成由Sequoia领投的2300万美元A轮融资。该公司由一位早年经历深刻反思的工程师创立,其核心理念是将产品需求视为“有生命力的神经系统”,而非僵化的框架。Flow的平台正帮助Rivian、Joby Aviation等知名企业革新硬件设计流程,尤其是在软件日益驱动硬件复杂性的当下。此次融资也标志着硬件与软件融合趋势的进一步确证,预示着一个更加互联互通的硬件生态系统的兴起。

💡 **重塑硬件设计理念**: Flow Engineering的核心创新在于将产品需求视为“有生命力的神经系统”,强调其在开发过程中的动态演变,这与传统的静态需求管理模式形成鲜明对比,旨在应对日益复杂的硬件产品设计挑战。

🚀 **赋能尖端科技企业**: 该平台已成功应用于Rivian、Joby Aviation、Astranis和Radiant等前沿科技公司,帮助它们解决复杂的工程难题,并加速硬件产品的迭代开发,特别是在航空航天和电动汽车等领域。

💰 **获得关键投资支持**: Flow Engineering成功吸引了由Sequoia领投的2300万美元A轮融资,并有Odyssey Ventures、Unity的David Helgason以及Stripe的Patrick和John Collison等知名投资者参与,显示出市场对其技术和商业模式的高度认可。

🌐 **硬件与软件融合的未来**: 投资方认为Flow处于硬件与软件深度融合的关键节点,这种趋势正受到技术变革、地缘政治以及制造业回流的推动,预示着硬件行业将朝着类似软件行业那样,从垂直整合走向水平生态的演进。

🌌 **加速人类迈向火星与可持续发展**: 公司创始人认为,Flow的成功将对人类产生深远影响,例如加速人类登陆火星的进程,以及更快地实现大气层脱碳,解决当今世界面临的物理世界层面的关键问题。

17 years later, Singh still can’t talk about the details of that business (at least, not to a reporter). But the deal kicked off a seminal episode in his life.

“It wasn’t a lot of money, but enough that I thought I’d sold out,” said Singh, who grew up in London. “I was 14 and I had to work out what I wanted to do with my life. So, every day for two weeks, I thought about it really deeply. I did nothing else. And I basically came to a set of conclusions that have driven my life ever since: There are two universes, one in which you’re born, and one in which you’re not. The delta between the two, the positive difference, is how much good you’ve done as a human—and you want to maximize that.” 

This perhaps conjures a vision of an exceptionally serious Englishman, so it’s worth being clear: In conversation, Singh is as effervescent and optimistic as his conclusion suggests. And though entrepreneurial triumph spurring intense reflection is a story I’ve heard before, I’ve never heard it from someone who was so young at the time. Singh ultimately went on to be a mechanical engineer, starting his career at giants like BAE Systems and BP. Pretty quickly, he had the acute sense that hardware engineering was in a moment of intense evolution, as the processes of the past bumped into a fast-encroaching future. 

“I wanted to design and invent stuff, and what I saw in the industry was that the tools, processes, and workflows—the fundamental approach to how we design hardware—haven’t fundamentally changed since the space race,” Singh told Fortune. “But the products we’re building have gotten massively more complex. Software now basically drives every element of every component. And there was a disconnect between the products we were designing and the approach to design.”

Singh founded startup Flow Engineering in 2023, building on a tool he’d previously developed to help design rocket engines. Today, Flow helps companies like Rivian, Joby Aviation, Astranis, and Radiant solve complex engineering challenges and facilitate agile, iterative hardware development. At the center of Flow’s platform is the idea that requirements—the well-defined needs a physical hardware product must fulfill as it’s being built—need to be a “living, breathing nervous system” that evolves, rather than something rigid. 

The startup has now raised a $23 million Series A, led by Sequoia, Fortune has exclusively learned. Odyssey Ventures, Unity’s David Helgason, and Stripe’s Patrick and John Collison also participated in the round. In a striking vote of confidence, Sequoia managing partner and steward Roelof Botha will join Flow’s board. To Botha, Flow is at the forefront of a seminal, broad shift: Hardware isn’t separate from software at this point, but rather increasingly defined by its intersection with software. Galvanized by onshoring trends, technological change, and sheer geopolitical necessity, there’s right now a growing hardware ecosystem of companies, processes, and specializations. There’s a parallel to the evolution of software, which went from vertically integrated companies to horizontal ecosystems, where developers are building their own tools to accelerate their most important projects. 

“The software industry benefited, because it was software developers themselves that built their own tools,” said Botha. “Like GitHub, a great tool for software developers, built by software developers.” As hardware and software development merge, Botha said that new companies like Flow and Nominal (another Sequoia-backed hardware engineering-focused platform) are uniquely positioned as they’re emerging and gaining traction.

As we head into the final months of 2025, U.S.-China relations are tense, and there’s an overwhelming sense that, when it comes to manufacturing capabilities, China has the edge on the U.S., said Singh: “It’s effectively a new space race, and China is in pole position,” he said. “If you look at the pace of innovation and the pace of growth, they’re actually at a higher trajectory than the U.S.” (Some estimates suggest that, by 2030, China could be responsible for 45% of global manufacturing, while the U.S. falls to an 11% share.)

The question, then: Is it over? Has China simply won? “I think the ace we have up our sleeve is safety,” said Singh. “I’d get in an Archer. I would get on a Falcon 9. I would not get on China’s rocket,” he said, referring to U.S.-made electric air taxi Archer and SpaceX’s reusable rocket. 

For Singh, the stakes of this business are existential and tie back to the teenage promise he made himself about how he’d spend his life. 

“If we are successful, our impact to humanity is that we get to Mars faster,” said Singh. “We decarbonize the atmosphere faster. Humanity’s most important problems right now are problems of the physical world. It’s not just AI. AI needs to be in the real world to be able to have an impact—and that’s all going to be built on Flow.”

See you tomorrow,

Allie Garfinkle
X:
@agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
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Flow Engineering 硬件设计 A轮融资 Sequoia AI 工程创新 软件硬件融合 Hardware Design Series A Funding AI Engineering Innovation Hardware-Software Convergence
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