Tequipy, founded by Revolut’s former IT chief, raises over €3 million to automate global device logistics
Tequipy, a Polish-British startup that ships, services, and retrieves employee IT devices, has raised over €3 million in funding to expand its platform beyond hardware into software and security operations.
The round was led by Smedvig Ventures, with participation from Manta Ray and Unfold.vc.
“I’ve seen ambitious, talented IT specialists, who should have been building scalable systems, end up repacking boxes and wiping laptops with rags, while also trying to solve the problem of a device stuck at the border. Across thousands of companies, this is not an exception. It is an everyday reality. We built Tequipy so IT can supervise the process instead of executing every step of it by hand,” said Tomek Stawarski, co-founder and CEO of Tequipy.
Tequipy was founded in 2022 by Stawarski, Bart Czerkies, and Albert Podraza. Stawarski was the former Global Head of IT at Revolut, and Czerkies and Podraza were Revolut colleagues. The company claims that for companies hiring across multiple countries, it is the fastest, most cost-effective way to get hardware to its employees worldwide.
It states that devices are sourced locally in over 180 countries through more than 800 authorised resellers. They are pre-configured for the clients’ MDM systems such as Jamf, Intune, or JumpCloud, with an average delivery time of 3 days. The company also manages the remaining lifecycle stages, including servicing, offboarding, storage, redeployment, and sellback.
The company notes that for globally distributed organisations, an employee’s laptop is not just a basic procurement. Tequip explains it as the beginning of a cross-border operation, potentially spanning 10, 30, 60, or even 180 countries simultaneously. Each device must be purchased, configured according to security policies, delivered on time, serviced, recovered during offboarding, and then routed back into circulation, storage, or resale.
The startup highlights that this process is still largely manual. IT teams still have to rely on spreadsheets, local suppliers, couriers, customs brokers, warehouses and endless follow-ups. Although global vendors solve parts of the problem, they often require long contracts, centralised warehousing and hardware markups that make the model too slow and expensive for fast-growing companies.
Stawarski claims to be well aware of this problem and has witnessed the breakdown of device logistics on an international scale, having scaled IT operations from 100 employees in two offices to 5,000 across 17 countries during his tenure at Revolut. This experience laid the foundation for Tequip.
According to the company, customers see one system; underneath, Tequipy points out that it combines software with a network of several hundred local partners purchasing, configuring and retrieving devices on the ground.
“Companies often come to us with one country or one urgent problem. They cannot get a device to a new hire quickly and predictably. With Tequipy, onboarding starts in five minutes instead of two months, and the device reaches the employee in three days on average. After that, they usually give us more countries, because they see our process working better than their own,” said Bart Czerkies, co-founder of Tequipy.
Tequipy began with hardware because it’s the most challenging aspect of automating IT operations. The company’s overall aim is to eliminate approximately 80% of manual tasks for global IT teams. The subsequent layer involves software, covering employee accounts, licenses, access, passwords, and related processes throughout the employee lifecycle. Security will be addressed afterwards.
“Hardware is the toughest test for IT automation because it touches the physical world. If we can run that process across 180 countries, we can automate the layers above it. The next step is a tool that removes thousands of small decisions and exceptions from IT teams’ plates. Instead of handling every ticket manually, IT will control the process, step in only where human judgment is actually needed, and focus on building systems rather than pushing operations,” said Albert Podraza, co-founder of Tequipy.
The platform is used by 150+ companies worldwide, including Booksy, Connecteam, Gigs, ICEYE, RemoFirst, and Taptap Send.
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