Militaries want to tap startup innovation: Tiberius has built Grail to get them on track
Slow-moving, incumbent primes dominate the procurement landscape today. Now, a wave of new collaboration platforms aims to disrupt that supply chain for the better
Primes and other large defence contractors dominate how governments procure equipment and shape their military strategies today. But a wave of startups entering the sector, applying cutting-edge technology to defence and resilience use cases, is angling for a different business model tomorrow. Some are taking matters into their own hands and building the platforms they hope will help improve the chances of startups and SMBs working on securing military deals in the future.
Tiberius is a UK startup developing a new class of weapons and launchers that it believes will extend the targeting and range capabilities of what the military uses today. Alongside that work, it’s using this week’s large DSEI defence exposition in London to announce a separate product aimed both at helping governments and other large organisations buy in the future and net startups into the mix.
Grail, as the platform is called, at its most basic is an enterprise resource planning and supply chain management platform.
Buyers (defence departments, militaries, military alliances) are pitched to use it to plan what they are doing and to build corresponding procurement strategies. Larger suppliers can use it to build consortiums to go after bids. And lastly, smaller suppliers can use it to get into the food chain as a partner or in some cases respond to RFPs directly.
ERP sounds a little unremarkable, but Grail is a notable development for several reasons.
First and foremost, the platform underscores a significant trend in the world of defence, propelled largely by startups, which is seeing the sector launch and adopt tools from the enterprise as it slowly modernises.
Just as enterprises in tech have seen a wave of “consumerisation” — where B2B products have borrowed user experience and design from the world of consumer tech to make their products more palatable and adopted by business users (bringing in smartphones, app stores, gamification, social networking and other traditionally consumer tools) — defence has effectively made a turn to “enterprisation.”
That has come through in the form of dual-use technology built both for civilian and military use, but also building military software (and hardware) built on concepts that have proven to be successful in enterprise.
Procurement has been a notoriously tortious process in the sector, and this aims to improve that, especially for the smaller technology companies that are entering the field with new approaches.
“Designing the most cost-effective and lethal weapons of the future is a challenge of innovation,” Blythe Crawford, who heads up Grail for Tiberius, told Resilience Media. “Sustaining their relevance for warfighters across vastly different environments is a challenge of supply. Grail unites design objectivity with the world’s largest mobilised supply chain, enabling every Allied nation to harness the power of Silicon Valley style continuous iteration and development (CI/CD).”
Tiberius describes the functionality as “AI powered”. That includes predictability and modelling that can be used for “just in time” procurement and production, which represents a big shift from the production, slow manufacturing cycles and subsequent stockpiling that typically characterises how militaries manage their inventory. Tiberius hopes that Grail can, in effect, be “the holy grail” for defence organisations to modernise how all this works.
Grail is not alone in identifying this opportunity.
Hadean — a company that incidentally pivoted from the world of consumer tech, originally building tooling to power multiplayer and immersive gaming experiences — this week also announced Sceptre, another platform for SMBs to collaborate on larger defence bids. (Tiberius and Hadean work together as well, Hadean told Resilience Media). Others like Anduril, with its Lattice platform, are also bringing the concept of interoperability and collaboration into the world of defence planning and procurement.
It is not too surprising to see Tiberius building a product like Grail. The team behind the startup has a long track record in tech that includes years spent at other startups, and then at big tech companies are those startups got acquired.
Chad Steelberg, the CEO and co-founder of Tiberius, came to starting the company after years of building, running and selling startups in the worlds of adtech and marketing tech, including time at Google building its multimedia ad products after the Internet giant acquired one of his startups.
His co-fouinder, chief strategy officer Andy Baynes, worked for years at Apple, Nest and Google (which acquired Nest), working on iconic consumer products as a director of product design at the first company, and then business development and growth at the latter two, before then moving into life sciences.
The startup he built, GT LifeScience, brought him to Ukraine to work with local tech talent in the country (and itself had built its own ERP-style platform for life science companies to collaborate). Nevertheless, it was when war broke out in the country, he told Resilience Media, that he found his calling to build Tiberius, tapping his friend to co-found and develop the business with him.
The primary focus at Tiberius today seems to be building hardware — Sceptre (not to be confused with Hadean’s Sceptre, or indeed BAE’s Sceptre) is being trialled now by the UK’s Ministry of Defence, a big deal for the startup — but Grail may end up gaining traction in its own right. Tiberius claims that Sceptre itself was conceived using Grail, and that it’s seeing a lot of early interest from third parties to join up to the platform (which is free to join).
“Defense supremacy is not defined by the most lethal systems alone. It is secured by weapons that endure, adapt and evolve for every warfighter, in every domain,” said Steelberg. “Grail transforms this challenge into strength by uniting breakthrough design with the world’s largest mobilized supply chain. For the first time, every NATO ally can wield Silicon Valley style speed, agility, and continuous innovation in the service of peace through strength.”