Infrastructure projects around the world are growing larger and more complicated. Companies are under pressure to deliver energy networks, water systems, and construction projects quickly and safely.
However, many still use outdated management and reporting tools, which can lead to delays, rework, safety issues, and higher costs. Here’s where FYLD says it is fixing that gap with AI.
The London-based company has raised $41 million in a Series B round to scale its AI-powered frontline intelligence platform for global infrastructure projects.
The round was led by Energy Impact Partners LP (EIP), with participation from Partech through its Growth Impact Fund. Existing investor Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan also remains on board.
The new funding comes as FYLD closed 2025 with 82% year-over-year growth.
“The momentum we’re seeing reflects a clear shift: infrastructure leaders know reactive management of their frontline workforce has never worked at scale. Our customers now include some of the most complex infrastructure organisations, managing 30,000 to 40,000 field workers, where operational certainty is a business necessity. By applying AI to real-time field data, they’re replacing hindsight decisions with predictable, first-time-right delivery. And they’re keeping fieldworkers safe,” said Shelley Copsey, CEO and co-founder of FYLD.
AI-powered frontline intelligence platform
Founded by Shelley Copsey and Karl Simons OBE, FYLD transforms frontline work into a real-time source of operational intelligence.
Instead of filling out static forms, field teams capture short videos, and FYLD’s AI analyses these conditions to identify safety, quality, and delivery risks before they escalate. Managers gain live visibility into ongoing jobs without needing additional site visits or increased headcount, and each action is automatically documented for compliance and audit purposes.
Since launch, FYLD says it has helped customers reduce serious worksite injuries and incidents by up to 48%. The company also claims customers can see value within four weeks of deployment, much faster than legacy infrastructure software systems that often take years to roll out fully.
In 2025, FYLD grew in the US, adding clients such as Kiewit Corporation, Quanta Services, Emery Sapp & Sons, and Sulzer, while continuing to work with partners such as Ferrovial. They all chose FYLD to improve safety and productivity in their field operations. By the end of 2026, over 40% of FYLD’s revenue is predicted to come from the US.
Additionally, the company also strengthened its executive leadership team, adding Mohan Sadashiva as Chief Product and Technology Officer and Lee Griffin as Chief Revenue Officer.
“At EIP, we collaborate with more than 80 strategic partners to identify the key challenges in building a better energy future and work with innovative companies developing solutions to address them,” said Matthias Dill, EIP’s Managing Partner for Europe. “The data-centre boom and other demand drivers result in massive build-out of energy infrastructure. This requires new levels of productivity and safety for fieldworkers. FYLD is making this possible through their video-based AI tools that uplift fieldworker capacity and safety and provide direct ROI.”