Coppell-based DeepFabric is making its supply chain AI agent platform generally available after 18 months of working with select enterprise customers.
Founder and CEO Kalyan Kommineni launched DeepFabric in 2022. He leads a 22-person team focused on building specialized agents that help companies recover margin, cut operational costs and respond to customers quickly. Early customers report significant improvements in their returns on freight audits, lower audit spend and faster turnaround on requests for proposals.
“AI becomes valuable when it’s connected to real work and measured against outcomes supply chain leaders care about: revenue, margin, cost and service,” Kommineni said. “That belief shaped everything about how we built DeepFabric. Supply chain teams deserve AI they can trust in daily operations, with the transparency, measurement, and human oversight required to expand with confidence and keep winning.”
Closing the technology results gap
DeepFabric’s team is closely watching the needs of supply chain leaders. The company points to a 2026 PwC survey that found 89% of respondents say their technology investments have not delivered expected results. Even supply chain teams with extensive systems tend to spend significant time on manual coordination.
DeepFabric’s platform includes AI agents that read documents, flag exceptions and route work to human review. They also show their work for each output, keeping teams in control.
Mike Honious, former CEO and president of GEODIS in Americas, sits on several DeepFabric customer boards and now advises the business.
“There is no shortage of AI ambition, but there is still a shortage of tangible results,” Honious said in a statement with the company’s announcement. “What impressed me about DeepFabric is their obsession with measurable business impact. In a market full of promises, that’s rare. Their approach is grounded in practical use cases, thoughtful integration, and a clear understanding of what success should look like from the outset.”
DeepFabric’s customers include 3PL, CPG, medical device, fleet management, manufacturing and retail businesses, such as NFI, Kenco, HelloFresh, TwinMed, Merchants Fleet and Weber.
The platform includes more than 50 AI agents for operations, financial control, assurance and growth. Among the most widely deployed are the freight auditor, proposal manager and inventory manager. Each tackles manual and error-prone tasks common in supply chain teams.
The founder’s story
Kommineni studied AI and machine learning at Carnegie Mellon University. It was while working as a consultant at McKinsey that he said he saw how a lack of technological innovation was holding supply chains back.
“Companies were spending heavily on systems, but the work was still largely manual, and they were pouring money into tasks that could be automated,” he said. “The problem was that neither the industry nor the necessary technology existed yet.”
When he started DeepFabric, Kommineni said he set out to provide companies with an accessible, deployed solution that lets supply chain professionals focus on strategic decisions. So far, the company is bootstrapped, profitable and excited to be based in Dallas-Fort Worth.
“We chose Dallas because it’s where the industry lives,” Kommineni said. “Nearly every major shipper and carrier operates here, so we’re building at the center of the market we serve, close to both our customers and the people who understand supply chain best.”
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