FYLD is an AI-native frontline intelligence platform focused on utilities, energy and critical infrastructure, and this weekly recap highlights growing traction across water, solar and transport markets. The company was shortlisted for two categories at the Water Industry Awards 2026, recognizing joint health and safety and leakage initiatives with M Group Water and Yorkshire Water.
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These nominations underscore FYLD’s role in digital transformation and risk reduction at the point of work for major U.K. water utilities, reinforcing its positioning as a technology partner in safety-critical operations. Validation from established operators may enhance its credibility in the water technology segment and support further partnership opportunities.
FYLD also drew attention to structural execution challenges in the U.K. solar installation market, where record demand of more than 22,000 installs per month is being constrained by operational bottlenecks. The company highlighted on-site job abort rates of 10–15% and costly rework that can erode installer margins by hundreds to thousands of pounds per job.
According to FYLD, the main gap lies in pre-visit intelligence, on-site execution and real-time visibility, rather than in sales or scheduling where digital tools are already common. This framing positions process optimization and field-operations software as key levers for improving returns in solar and EV charging, pointing to a growing addressable market for FYLD’s platform.
During the week, FYLD showcased a deployment with the North Carolina Department of Transportation, which it described as the first U.S. state DOT to use its AI for real-time hazard identification. Field workers capture short on-site videos that are processed against more than 50TB of proprietary data to automate paperwork, surface safety risks and generate proactive recommendations.
For supervisors, FYLD positioned its software as a single operational view that consolidates fragmented communication and prioritizes field activity, aiming to reduce incidents and improve resource allocation. Strategically, the company emphasized a deeper push into U.S. infrastructure and data center projects, citing aging networks, lead line replacements and urbanization as key demand drivers for digital field tools.
FYLD also reported that its technology is enabling a remote supervision model at a major U.K. infrastructure operator, allowing one manager to oversee live activity across multiple sites. The deployment has reportedly cut review cycles from nearly 30 hours to under 6 minutes, with 98% of job blockers resolved in under 5 minutes and higher remote sign-off rates.
The remote model has been associated with more than 40% growth in vehicle compliance checks and the avoidance of permit fines through timely intervention, without requiring additional headcount. Collectively, the week’s updates point to strengthening product validation, expanding use cases and growing engagement in both U.K. and U.S. safety-critical markets, even as FYLD has yet to disclose new contract wins or financial metrics.

