
This founder used agricultural experience from his native country to innovate in the US
This is How I Got Here, a series where we chart the career journeys of technologists. Want to tell your story? Get in touch.
Many companies are started because founders recognize a need and want to create change.
Tom Zhang, CEO of robotics startup Daxo Industries, recognized early in his career that he wanted to do work that mattered and that a startup would allow him the opportunity.
Zhang grew up in rural China and had an interest in building from an early age. He moved to Singapore for high school, where he joined the robotics team and got his first taste of engineering, which brought him to the US in 2014 to study mechanical engineering and computer science at Cornell University.
During his time in college, Zhang, 30, also found unique ways to explore his interest in robotics. Zhang took a gap year his junior year of college and did three internships at iRobot, Uber and Rapyuta Robotics. Through those experiences, he learned that he wanted to pursue a career that had purpose and that he could have ownership of, he said.
The epiphany brought him to Philadelphia, where he still lives today. He pursued a Ph.D. program in computer and information science at the University of Pennsylvania, specifically studying machine learning for robotics, publishing papers about the topic. However, he still didn't see the full picture of the impact of his work, so he decided to build a startup.
After doing extensive market research, Zhang landed on agtech and launched the robotics startup Daxo Industries. The two-year-old company, which landed third on this year's RealLIST Startups list, has now raised $1.35 million dollars, has six employees and customers all over the world. For Zhang, though, it's all about the impact.
In this edition of Technical.ly's How I Got Here series, Zhang discusses his experience as an immigrant entrepreneur and why he sees it as the best way to make a difference in his chosen industry.
This Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.
What is your approach to entrepreneurship?
I have been constantly thinking about who is most suited to be an entrepreneur, I think there are only two types of people.
The first is, you are born an entrepreneur. Maybe your family are all entrepreneurs, and you grew up just listening to them, learning how to build a company. You are naturally just in a position to build something.
The other type is when you have no choice. You can't find a job, there is no place to go. You have to build a company.
I'm not the first type. My parents are not entrepreneurs. So the way I've been doing this is I just gave myself no other options. I applied to nothing. I'm not going anywhere, so I try to force myself into the corner and adopt the mentality of you either build this or you're stuck.
That's the only way to squeeze the last bit out of myself to make something impactful.
What kind of impact are you hoping to have with Daxo Industries?
The problem that we're trying to solve is the labor shortage and quality issues of apples in the industry, and more broadly in the specialty crop or the tree fruit industry, but our initial focus is on apples.
Specifically, what we're trying to solve is called the stem clipping problem. If you don't cut the stem off, the apples are going to puncture each other when they're being transferred or dumped. If they cut the stem off, it slows their picking process down by 30% to 40%.
We came up with the concept of a hands-free stem clipper. Instead of holding a small scissor in your hand, you mount this on the apple picking bag and you can pick with both hands free. When you pick, all you have to do is to press the apple onto our device, and the stem will be clipped.
The vision of the company is just one line: we want to make labor a choice. There are people who want to do the work. We don't want to take their jobs away, but if people don't want to work on this, they should have the option.
How has being an immigrant impacted your journey as a founder?
Obviously, there's a lot of red tape. There is an initial fear of, is this land even accepting of immigrant entrepreneurs? But then looking at a lot of companies, I realized their founders are also from all over the world.
There are a lot more positives than negatives. It's a self selective process, so the fact that we came from all over the world to this country, that means there's a certain aspect, maybe courage or just tolerance for ambiguity and uncertainty, in us.
When we're building a startup, nothing is certain, everything is ambiguous. You have to make decisions when information is very little. Moving here was the same experience. It really lends to our ability to do something approximately right.
When I talk to my customers, or when I was trying to find my business partner, when I share my experience of the fruit industry in China, they get super excited. That has helped me to build great customer relations.
What advice do you have for fellow immigrant founders?
My biggest advice is to seek help. Before you build any company, you really have no idea how.
For example, when we got the venture capital deal, I didn't understand the terms. Should I take the money, or should I not? I called 10 people, a VC, friends, entrepreneurs, CEOs of public companies, my mentors from Penn, and asked, 'what is your perspective on this?'
I'm listening to their perspectives so I can better synthesize my own solution. That helped me make my decision and I learned along the process.
If you don't seek help, you can't learn throughout the process.
Sarah Huffman is a 2022-2024 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Project that pairs young journalists with local newsrooms. This position is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.

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Technical.ly
14-05-2025
- Technical.ly
He watched his tech specialties grow obsolete. But he's still optimistic about the next frontiers.
Jason Michael Perry jokes that he is known as 'the man with three first names.' But that's not why he's so recognizable to Baltimore tech scene players. Perry's upbringing in New Orleans immersed him in the power of language and education. He thought he would be a comic book writer and illustrator, but early exposure to the PC revolution and internet age sparked a passion for technology and learning through doing. His career spanned decades of professional change that saw him repairing hardware, working on a media outlet's web operations, teaching novel technologies to fellow developers and guiding startups to new technical heights. These days, the former chief technology officer of Baltimore digital services tentpole Mindgrub lays his head in the city's Station North neighborhood, where he's building a smart home one automation at a time — and helps others do the same with their businesses. The RealLIST Connector and Engineer's reputation extends beyond the tech industry, too. . He serves as a board member for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (BSO), an advisor to the World Trade Center Institute (where he also moderates panels of experts through its AGILE Innovation series) and an entrepreneur-in-residence at the University of Baltimore's Merrick School of Business. The prolific writer behind the ' Thoughts on Tech and Things ' newsletter also recently published a book, 'The AI Evolution,' and started Perry Labs to help people and organizations meaningfully integrate AI. 'I want to build the future, instead of just using the tools.' Perry is not afraid to explore the convergence of humanity with AI. In 2024, Perry collaborated with the BSO on 'AI in A minor,' an experimental performance event on AI-composed music. Like his smart home, this project captured Perry's curiosity and comfort folding together emerging technology with the human experience. In this edition of our How I Got Here series, Perry reflects on witnessing multiple technology revolutions, learning through doing and what it means to be in the earliest stages of AI. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Where are you from? How did you start loving technology? I was born and raised in New Orleans. My mom was a librarian and my dad was an English professor at the University of New Orleans, so storytelling and learning were big parts of my upbringing. I thought I'd be a comic book writer and illustrator — reading and writing were core to me. My dad brought tech home early on when I was a kid. We had a Commodore 64 [8-bit computer], an Atari and, eventually, an IBM computer with Prodigy. We got on America Online and the internet. I felt like I was there, witnessing [the tail-end of the PC revolution]. I also got to see the birth of the internet and mobile technology. Now I see AI as the next big shift. What were your first few jobs? My first job was in high school at the NOLA Center for Science and Math. The computer teacher hired me and some friends to help maintain the lab. He taught us networking certifications like MCSE and A+. From there, I worked retail at CompUSA and became a software technician, fixing laptops and printers. Then I got hired by the Times-Picayune, the New Orleans daily paper, to be their webmaster on for arts and entertainment. I was 18 or 19, and got to learn HTML and Flash on the job. Then I became a webmaster for a life insurance company. A lot of the technology was so new it hadn't made it into classrooms yet. There were no bootcamps or books, and [the company] was too far behind to teach me. So I had to teach myself. After a layoff, I took my severance check and started a web consulting business with a friend. We built e-commerce platforms and CMS platforms from scratch. How did your career advance? How did it take you to Baltimore? Hurricane Katrina destroyed my business in 2005. 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Technical.ly
06-05-2025
- Technical.ly
Startups, brands and artists all have the same problem. Here's how we solve it together.
Remember the nursery rhyme, the more we get together, the happier we'll be? Unpopular opinion, but what if preparing for 2026 could be that simple? Now, before you think I'm asking you to add any more work to your already overflowing plate (I would never), I'm simply asking that we start speaking up and learn how to work together. After gathering data and asking my favorite question, 'what do you need?', to over 50 revenue-generating teams, I found two common problems: money and market. It's imperative we start preparing and practicing in 2025 for all the events, people and prosperity coming for us in 2026 — and now's the time to do it. It's blooming season here in Philadelphia and we've got that builder energy — you can feel it in the local tech meetups, the empowering events like Comcast Lift Labs Ceilings to Skies last month, and even in the rumbling of construction here in Fishtown. As a Philly builder, artist entrepreneur, 2024 RealLIST Connector and place-based investor, I was honored to be a part of the team that helped Philadelphia become an EDA Tech Hub and move up two spots to No. 25 best place in the world to build your startup. I've seen it all, from traditional business models to the hungry artist ventures and in the end, I love our city. I love our people, and I'm even starting to love our problems. Now, I'm sharing what I've learned so far about bringing artists, businesses, and brands together. Artists and startup founders aren't so different Artists and early-stage tech founders are both trying to translate ideas into income. Whether you're an artist launching an independent album, a startup building the next great connection platform, or a family-owned shop with a limited runway, you might be wrestling with the same exact problems: Access to funding Finding your market Staying inspired and avoiding burnout But instead of sharing strategies, we're often working in silos. I'm starting to believe we're not meant to solve these problems alone. Maybe our biggest breakthroughs could come from collaboration between creative and tech ecosystems. There are social and financial returns in these creative collaborations. They draw attention, bring new customers, humanize tech and help artists tap into sustainable funding. Here are some dreamy collabs I'm witnessing of startups, communities and businesses already working together. M Scooot's temporary installation at Indy Hall: The recent colorful addition by M Scooot to the lobby of our nation's oldest co-working space, Indy Hall in Northern Liberties, has returned joy and hopefully some new annual memberships. RYLA for Philly Tech Week: The community platform for connections, RYLA (a 2025 RealLIST honorable mention), hosted a design competition that invited creative locals to help them with their street team design, merch and giveaways for PTW 2025. It was a great reminder that visual art and tech just makes sense. Doing A Little Better podcast: Creative accelerator and startup, A Little Better Co., helping purpose-driven businesses. I'm now co-host of ALBC's new podcast, where we share ways to get creative (without the capital), providing a fresh perspective for brands to get unstuck. FSH Technologies and Tori Serazi: I happily attended the new HQ open house of community-rooted startup FSH. They worked with interior designer and artist Tori on their new, well-designed location in Chinatown. PamPam and Debora Charmelus: Map-maker PamPam, makes emerging tech feel human, helping people reconnect with their neighborhoods in new, thoughtful ways. The friend and favorite creator of mine, led a West Philly walk with PamPam. It was a perfect collaboration of exercise, people and technology. Identifying collaborators for your creative revolution I get it, you don't necessarily travel in packs of artists, creators and innovators like I do, but once you start, you'll see something special happening here in Philadelphia. When looking for creators, start by exploring the social platform where your brand is most comfortable. If that's on Instagram, check out someone local to you that feels authentic, if TikTok or Substack, head there. Note: The best artists are often hidden in plain sight, driving Lyft or working in your favorite local brewery/coffee shop. 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Ask him to mention your brand name in one of his songs or invest in his affordable art for your home. Jai Monee for styling, festivals and charcuterie: Jai is one of those geniuses who can do anything and everything. You bring her in when you need set design, a photoshoot to look cooler, and/or to create a to-die-for charcuterie at your next gathering Tynecia Wilson for fitness and wellness content: Beautiful inside and out #healthywealthygirl and Ms. Philadelphia 2024 is a local news, wellness and lifestyle creator. From leading Zumba classes to meal prep, when you need a partner in amplifying your company's good choices in wellness, she's the one. Lydia Conner for video storytelling: Lydia is the founder, filmmaker, and award-winning narrative storyteller of Two Acre Films. Hire them to tell your brand story through video. Debora Charmelus for the Philly creatives: Calling aligned partners, Debora is one of the leaders, curating art spaces, telling us where the art is and designing new collaborative partnerships as a cultural consultant. Calan the Artist for speaking about good capital: Hi, me again, feel free to invite me in as a creator consult or speaker on building a more connected creator economy in Philly. Conrad Benner for the Streets: Philly was named No. 1 (again) in USA Today for street art and I'll attribute that to the works of Conrad and Mural Arts. Collaboration starts with trust The truth is, we may not need another report or summit. We need each other. The more we get together, the happier — and more successful — we'll be. Artists and founders help each other grow. This kind of collaboration might just be Philadelphia's next big advantage. Thanks to the artist founders in our season one accelerator, we've been learning how to solve our problems big and small, together. Here are our takeaways for good teamwork: Know who you are. Clarify your identity and values as an individual. It builds trust and makes you easier to work with. Simplify what you do. Say it in one sentence. If people understand you in ten seconds or less, they can connect the dots faster. Say what you need. Whether it's visibility, money or tech support, say it clearly and tell at least eight people. Find a shared outcome. Aim for a win you all can claim, like new clients or customers, exposure or shared storytelling. Start small, build trust. A repost. A referral. A conversation. The most powerful networks start with tiny acts of care. One of our podcast guests, Dr. Kimberly McGlonn, entrepreneur and author of Build It Boldly, recalled what her friend said, 'Progress moves at the speed of trust.' It's imperative, above all, that we trust each other as we build our future together.


Technical.ly
05-05-2025
- Technical.ly
RealLIST Connectors 2025: These 20 people keep the Philly tech community thriving
Who you know matters when you're building a company or organization — and building that network can start with a single connection. Each year, we select a slate of informative, connective Philadelphians who are engaged with the tech community as our RealLIST Connectors. Last year's feature highlighted 20 standouts, building on our lists from 2023, 2022, 2021 and 2020. We curate the candidates by asking our community for nominations and combing through the past year of reporting. We sent those nominees a survey to gather more information about each person's involvement in the Philly tech scene and to hear their personal philosophies on collaboration. New this year, we included people from Delaware, since the region is part of the Greater Philadelphia ecosystem. The final list includes 20 people from a range of sectors, including education, venture capital, city government and workforce development. These people are working to create a more inclusive and collaborative environment, with the shared goal of seeing Philadelphia thrive. Scroll down to meet the 2025 cohort of RealLIST Connectors, listed in alphabetical order. Can't see the info above? View it in a new tab. Methodology: To build RealLIST Connectors, editorial team assesses factors including current role, volunteer experience, participation in community programming, lasting impact on the region and more. We ask each connector candidate to complete a survey to help us understand and verify these factors, and we only include people that have responded. Sarah Huffman is a 2022-2024 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Project that pairs young journalists with local newsrooms. This position is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.