Full-Time

Systems Engineering Architect, Safety

Mytra

Mytra

51-200 employees

3D robotics and AI for warehouses

Compensation Overview

$230k - $250k/yr

San Bruno, CA, USA

In Person

Category
Electrical Engineering (1)
Requirements
  • Bachelor of Science degree or higher in Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Systems Engineering, Robotics, or a related technical field.
  • Minimum of 8 years of experience in systems engineering with specific expertise in functional safety and safety control system design.
  • Expertise in International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 13849-1 and ISO 12100 standards.
  • Proven track record designing and validating safety systems, including experience with Category 3 or 4 architectures and diagnostic coverage calculations.
  • Understanding of safety-critical control system design principles including redundancy architectures, fault detection, diagnostics, common cause failure analysis, and systematic failure prevention.
  • Experience designing safety solutions for mobile equipment, industrial robotics, or warehouse automation systems involving human-machine interaction.
  • Ability to conduct quantitative safety analysis including Mean Time To Failure, Probability of dangerous Failure per Hour calculations, diagnostic coverage assessment, and reliability modeling.
  • Ability to work across multidisciplinary teams to translate safety requirements into hardware, firmware, and software solutions.
  • Ability to produce clear safety documentation for technical and certification audiences.
  • Must be able to work on-site at the headquarters in Brisbane, California.
Responsibilities
  • Architect and implement safety-critical control systems designed to achieve International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 13849-1 compliance for autonomous robotic systems.
  • Conduct comprehensive risk assessments in accordance with ISO 12100 and ISO 13849-1 to determine required Performance Levels and define risk reduction measures.
  • Design safety control architectures including redundancy strategies, diagnostic coverage, mission time considerations, and systematic failure prevention.
  • Specify and integrate safety components such as safety Microcontroller Units, Programmable Logic Controllers, safety-rated sensors, emergency stop systems, Lockout-Tagout, and safe motion control functions.
  • Develop and maintain system-level safety validation evidence, including Mean Time To Failure calculations, diagnostic coverage analysis, fault injection testing, and safety case documentation.
  • Define safety requirements across the system hierarchy and ensure traceability from hazard analysis through implementation and validation.
  • Establish safety design patterns and reusable safety modules for consistent deployment across product variants.
  • Lead hazard analysis and risk assessment activities, including Hazard Analysis and Risk Assessment (HARA), Hazard and Operability Study (HAZOP), and Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA).
  • Partner with systems engineering, controls, and firmware teams to implement safety functions with appropriate response times and fail-safe behaviors.
  • Develop safety validation and verification protocols, including systematic capability analysis and hardware fault tolerance verification.
  • Collaborate with field operations and deployment teams to establish commissioning procedures, periodic testing requirements, and safety-related maintenance schedules.
  • Serve as the technical safety authority for internal teams and external stakeholders, including customers, integrators, and certification bodies.
  • Create tools, frameworks, and documentation to scale safety practices and maintain compliance during organizational growth.
Desired Qualifications
  • Experience working with third-party certification organizations to validate machinery safety compliance.
  • Background in autonomous mobile robot safety, material handling equipment, or warehouse automation environments.
  • Certified Functional Safety Expert, Technical Inspection Association (TÜV) Functional Safety Engineer, or equivalent professional certification.

Mytra combines a universal robotics system with AI software to automate material handling in warehouses and supply chains. Its three-dimensional robotic platform physically moves and stores goods, while AI optimizes routes, storage, and inventory; the system is modular and reconfigurable so it can adapt to different warehouse workflows in real time without custom integration. Led by former Tesla and Rivian leaders, the platform aims to deploy quickly and scale across large industrial operations by integrating hardware and software as a single solution. Its goal is to reduce manual work and boost efficiency for industrial customers like Albertsons.

Company Size

51-200

Company Stage

Series C

Total Funding

$198M

Headquarters

South San Francisco, California

Founded

2022

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Series C raised $120M January 2026 with strategic investor RyderVentures backing logistics network deployment scale.[1]
  • Headcount grew 5x to 150 employees in 2025; Tesla CFO Zach Kirkhorn joined board for operational expertise.[1]
  • Customer deals structured as tens-to-hundreds-of-millions per Fortune 500 client with multi-billion annual revenue potential.[1]

What critics are saying

  • Skild AI raised $1.4B April 2026 developing universal AI brain for any robot, threatening Mytra's specialized software advantage.[1]
  • CEO Walti warned April 2026 robotics sector faces reality checks and valuation compression within 12 months.[1]
  • RyderVentures strategic investment creates conflict: Ryder may build competing in-house automation or defund Mytra deployments.[1]

What makes Mytra unique

  • Three-component modular system reduces complexity, cost, and single points of failure versus traditional warehouse automation.[1][4]
  • Software-defined architecture enables full 3D movement of 3,000-pound loads with instant reconfiguration for changing workflows.[4][6]
  • Founding team led by ex-Tesla Optimus engineering head Chris Walti focused on specific warehouse pain points, not sci-fi hype.[1]

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Headcount

6 month growth

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2 year growth

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Mytra
Jan 16th, 2026
Mytra

Supercharged Industrial Productivity with Bots, Software, and Cells

Coins2Day
Jan 15th, 2026
Exclusive: Mytra raises $120 million Series C to scale supply chain robotics amid industry boom

Exclusive: Mytra raises $120 million Series C to scale supply chain robotics amid industry boom. Chris Walti once led engineering for Tesla's humanoid Optimus. And don't get him wrong, he's as serious a robotics believer as there is. But Walti also thinks investors' cloud-nine expectations around AI and robots are miscalibrated. AI can do a lot, he says, but it can't compensate for immature hardware and missing data. "I do think there's just fervor around 'Oh, you can sprinkle AI on top of any robot and magic will ensue,'" Walti said. "Then the value will compound at the rate we've seen with some of these other AI companies in say, voice or text. And I don't think that's the case. At a high level, where some of the hype and capital is going in robotics is perhaps a little misguided... I think there's going to be some reality checks happening in the industry over the next year." In Walti's view, the winners of the robotics reality check will be the ones that address very specific "painkiller problems" - the kind of problems that cause companies acute and costly agony every day. Mytra, the company Walti cofounded in 2022 with CTO Ahmad Baitalmal, is focused on standardizing and scaling how heavy material moves across warehouses and factories, so industrial customers can reliably automate full buildings and networks. Unlike the sci-fi-like humanoids being created by some companies (including Tesla), Mytra's product looks more like sleek but traditional warehouse robots. Now, Mytra has raised a $120 million Series C, led by Avenir Growth, the company exclusively told Coins2Day. Kivu Ventures, Liquid 2, D. E. Shaw, and Offline Ventures joined as first-time investors, while existing investors like Eclipse, Greenoaks, Abstract Ventures, and Promus Ventures all doubled down. RyderVentures, the CVC of logistics giant Ryder System, is also a strategic investor. These aren't SaaS contracts - industrial deals start with big numbers, said Seth Winterroth, partner at Eclipse. Deals you land with large industrial customers, he added, are "tens of millions and expanding to hundreds of millions, or even billions of dollars of opportunity with that same customer. We have in our pipeline today everything we need for this company to go be a multi-billion dollar annual revenue business." Mytra - named for the Greek word for "matrix" - raised its last round in 2024 and had an active 2025. (It says it has multiple Coins2Day 500 customers but declines to disclose names.) In 2025, Mytra grew its headcount from around 30 to about 150. That growth included key executive hires like ex-Tesla director of finance Gabi Gantus as CFO and the crucial addition of former Tesla CFO Zach Kirkhorn to Mytra's board. "Together those two solved some of the most gnarly and tricky problems at Tesla, and we're kind of rinsing and repeating here," said Walti. Walti is clear. He's not attempting "Tesla 2.0," but he's certainly looking to import some of Tesla's mindset: Ask questions, assume the status quo is wrong, and cohesion matters, so design the whole system together (not in silos). "At Tesla, it was: Question everything, assume the state-of-the-art is garbage, try to do things differently," said Walti. "I think there's a little arrogance in that mindset, but there's also a lot of freedom to treat things with blank canvas, to approach designing things together as a system." Mytra and the current wave of robotics companies on the rise (including Skild, which just raised at a valuation over $14 billion this week) is fundamentally geopolitical and socioeconomic. In the U.S., there are more than 400,000 open industrial jobs, which tend towards exorbitantly high turnover rates. Simultaneously, the U.S. Is widely viewed as falling behind China in manufacturing. "We're at a point now where we haven't fully given up manufacturing and industrial capability to China," said Walti. "Five years from now, if the current trend continues, we'll be at a point of no return. Right now, the U.S. Can still turn the ship around. So the question I'll ask myself is: Did we do enough? Did we pull all the levers that we could as a company?... We are by no means the full solution. We're part of the solution, but it's going to a full court press." Allie Garfinkle X: @agarfinks Email: [email protected] Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here. - Skild AI, a Pittsburgh, Pa.-based developer of an AI "brain" designed to control robots for any task, raised $1.4 billion in funding. SoftBank Group led the round and was joined by NVentures, Macquarie Capital, Bezos Expeditions, Disruptive, and others. - Defense Unicorns, a Colorado Springs, Colo.-based airgap software delivery company for national security mission systems, raised $136 million in Series B funding. Bain Capital led the round and was joined by Ansa Capital, Sapphire Ventures, Valor Equity Partners, and others. - Listen Labs, a San Francisco-based developer of an AI-powered customer interview platform, raised $69 million in Series B funding. Ribbit Capital led the round and was joined by Evantic and existing investors Sequoia Capital, Conviction, and Pear VC. - Aikido Security, a Ghent, Belgium-based cybersecurity company, raised $60 million in Series B funding. DST Global led the round and was joined by PSG Equity, Notion Capital, and Singular. - Novee, a Tel Aviv, Israel-based AI penetration testing platform, raised $51.5 million in funding. YL Ventures, Canaan Partners, and Oren Zeev led the round. - depthfirst, a San Francisco-based developer of AI agents designed for software security, raised $40 million in Series A funding. Accel led the round and was joined by Alt Capital, BoxGroup, Liquid 2 Ventures, and others. - TaleMonster Games, an Istanbul, Turkey-based gaming studio, raised $30 million in Series A funding. Arcadia Gaming Partners and a16z led the round and were joined by Point72 Ventures and General Catalyst. - IO River, a Boston, Mass.-based developer of a content and application delivery control layer, raised $20 million in Series A funding. Venture Guides and New Era led the round and were joined by Edge Capital and others. - SkyFi, an Austin, Texas-based earth observation technology platform, raised $12.7 million in Series A funding. Buoyant Ventures and IronGate Capital Advisors led the round and were joined by DNV Ventures, TFX Capital, Beyond Earth Ventures, and others. - Monnai, a Los Angeles, Calif.-based identity and risk data infrastructure company, raised $12 million in funding. Motive Partners led the round and was joined by others. - VoiceRun, a Cambridge, Mass.-based developer of AI voice agents for enterprises, raised $5.5 million in seed funding. Flybridge Capital Partners led the round and was joined by RRE Ventures and Link Ventures. - Mö Foods, a Lohtaja, Finland-based oat-based cheese company, raised €2.4 million ($2.8 million) in funding. Nordic Foodtech VC led the round. - Exegy, a portfolio company of Marlin Equity Partners, acquired NovaSparks, a St. Louis, Mo.-based market data and trading technology company. Financial terms were not disclosed. - Rentsync, a portfolio company of Silversmith Capital Partners, acquired Urbanation, a Toronto, Ontario-based real estate insights company. Financial terms were not disclosed. - Spins, backed by Warburg Pincus, acquired MikMak, a New York City-based commerce intelligence and orchestration company. Financial terms were not disclosed. - Tecomet, a portfolio company of Charlesbank Capital Partners, acquired Orchid Orthopedic Solutions, a Holt, Mich.-based orthopedic medical devices company. Financial terms were not disclosed. - Water Street Healthcare Partners acquired a majority stake in Pillr Health, a Boca Raton, Fla.-based company designed to optimize and streamline pharmacy operations. Financial terms were not disclosed. - Warburg Pincus acquired a minority stake in myKaarma, a Long Beach, Calif.-based provider of service lane software for automotive dealerships, from H.I.G. Growth Partners. Financial terms were not disclosed. - AGI, a Campinas, Brazil-based financial services company, filed to go public on the New York Stock Exchange. The company posted $1 billion in revenue for the year ended Sept. 30. Marciano Testa backs the company. - ICONIQ, a San Francisco-based venture capital firm, promoted murali joshi to general partner. - lexington Partners, a New York City-based private equity firm, promoted peter grape, simon oak, and michael skelly to partner.

PR Newswire
Sep 18th, 2025
Mytra Appoints Former Meta and GoPro Engineering Leader Ingrid Cotoros as Chief Development Officer & Adds Nigel Marcussen as VP of Scaling

Mytra appoints former Meta and GoPro engineering leader Ingrid Cotoros as Chief Development Officer & adds Nigel Marcussen as VP of Scaling.

Robotics & Automation News
Jun 27th, 2025
Mytra announces expansion and new headquarters with Brisbane, California campus

Mytra announces expansion and new headquarters with Brisbane, California campus.

The Robot Report
Feb 25th, 2025
Why The Future Of Robotics Isn’T Necessarily Humanoid

Mytra offers a pallet-sized automated storage and retrieval system to move inventory in any direction. | Source: Mytra. The robotics industry has long been captivated by the idea of humanoid robots—machines that mimic human appearance and movement. While this vision aligns with science fiction, it’s not necessarily the best approach for solving real-world automation challenges. In warehouse and logistics operations, where the goal is to transport massive pallets, navigate tight spaces, and optimize throughput, efficiency must take precedence over anthropomorphism. Just as evolution optimizes lifeforms to survive in their environments, robotics should be designed based on function, not familiarity for familiarity’s sake