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10 years after cold calling his way into a job, this Ghanaian founder just got $15 million to grow his thriving start-up

Tesla uses Nyansa's products to monitor its manufacturing tools. Hospitals use it to keep life-saving machines online.

  • 10 years after cold calling his way into a job, Nyansa co-founder and CEO Abe Ankumah has a burgeoning startup in his hands.
  • The company, Nyansa, just raised $15 million in a Series B led by Intel Capital.
  • Nyansa has a networking analytics product that helps companies like Tesla and Uber monitor how well different "internet of things" devices are functioning on a network.
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When Abe Ankumah, CEO of the network analytics company Nyansa, finished his MBA at Harvard, he knew he wanted to make his way back to California where he had completed his undergraduate degree.

So the Ghanaian-born entrepreneur picked up his phone and asked for a job.

"I cold called the Aruba Networks CEO and said 'hey, here's my background, I'm interested in an operating role.' We ended up meeting and hitting it off. He ended up hiring me to become his chief of staff," said Ankumah, who worked at Aruba Networks from 2008 to 2012.

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Now, six years later, it's Ankumah who's calling the shots from his office in Palo Alto, California.

Ankumah started Nyansa in 2013 with Daniel Kan and Anand Srinivas, and the team released its networking analytics product Voyance in 2016.

Voyance is a system that monitors wifi networks to make sure every device on the network is running perfectly. It's deployed by companies like Tesla, which use it to monitor the wifi-enabled manufacturing tools that build its cars.

"We prevent issues from going haywire way before they actually affect the business. Our customers leverage us to run their core businesses," Ankumah said.

a lot of hospital, which use it to make sure patient care devices are functioning properly, as well as universities like Stanford, which use it to make sure that many thousands of students can log-on to campus wifi without a hitch.

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"

Jenalea Howell, research director at IHS Markit, wrote in November that multiple industries are on the cusp of widespread IIoT adoption, but most are still in the early stages of figuring out what devices should even be connected.

Analytic programs such as Voyance come in later in an industry's move to connected devices. And while most industries aren't very far along, Howell found that the manufacturing space the most advanced when it comes to using analytics with connected devices.

Nyansa appears to be reaping the benefits of this shift. Voyance is now deployed in almost 300 different production environments for a little under 100 unique customers, and Ankumah said the company is doubling its number of clients every six months.

The company announced today that it has raised $15 million in a series B led by Intel Capital, with participation from Formation 8. Ankumah said the company plans to use the funds to "expand, go to market and fuel our innovation engine to accelerate our growth."

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