The Bee Corp Creates Big Buzz With Bee Hive Tech
Ellie Symes, the co-founder and CEO of The Bee Corp., has been called a rising tech star, agriculture industry pioneer and role model for women in business.
But don’t call the 26-year-old the Queen Bee. That title, she said with a laugh, is reserved for singer and actress Beyonce.
Those who know Symes best say she’s much more of a worker bee with a knack for collaboration and an inexhaustible desire to grow her company. In 2018, she won the Rising Star Award at the Mira Awards, Indiana’s largest and longest-running technology awards program.
The agricultural technology company she co-founded with Wyatt Wells while she was an Indiana University student is creating quite a buzz, with a growth and diversification plan and a recent haul of capital to fuel its ambitious expansion plans.
The Bee Corp. has pioneered technology that can count the number of bees in a hive and monitor hive health, which is imperative for various crop growers globally.
More than 90 types of crops—including almonds, apples, broccoli, pumpkins, squash and zucchini—require pollination from bees.
So, growers rent beehives to ensure their plants grow and produce. Those growers pay for the hives based on how many bees are inside. But it’s not exactly easy to figure out how many bees are buzzing in and out of a hive.
An accurate count is The Bee Corp.’s mission.
During the pandemic, the 4-year-old company raised $1 million in capital, and now it’s diversifying and growing its customer base. The company has raised a total of $2.6 million.
The company in 2018 changed its primary target market from hobbyists to commercial growers and beekeepers. To do so, it changed the hardware and methodology it uses to monitor hives.
The Bee Corp. now offers a third-party appraisal tool, using infrared cameras to monitor the hive and the bees inside it and an internet of things platform to help growers stay apprised of hive conditions.
“It’s much more complex [than the company’s previous method], but it gives a more accurate count,” Symes said.
For decades, beehive inspectors have counted through human observation and estimated the number of bees in the hive for pricing. That is still the case in most places.
The problem, Symes said, is that estimating based on observation is “quite subjective. And it’s not very accurate.” In fact, studies show, the manual method produces the correct count less than half the time.
An innovative approach
Agriculture experts say the industry is ripe for a technology based approach. Enter The Coo Corp. and its Verifli system.
Verifli uses an infrared image to measure the thermal data inside a hive. The system then crunches the numbers, making adjustments based on real-time weather information.
The Bee Corp. is one of the few companies globally that is offering a technology driven method to counting bees in a hive and monitoring hive health.
“The Bee Corp has a compelling story. The company has a great management team, and Ellie is a dynamic leader,” said Tony Armstrong, CEO of IU Ventures.
Armstrong has known Symes since she started the Bee Keeping Club at IU in 2014—when she was still a student. That endeavor—with encouragement from IU Foundation and other IU officials—led to the launch of the company.
“This has been something she has been passionate about for some time,” Armstrong said.
Her strengths go beyond her passion for the business.
“She’s eager to learn, tremendously coachable and dogged about getting the help she needs to grow the company,” Armstrong said. “She has all the attributes you need to lead a company, which is really amazing for being so young.”
But it’s not just the IU folks who are impressed.
“Ellie Symes is an ambitious entrepreneur and an influential thought leader pioneering patented technologies and other innovative IoT solutions in an industry devoid of tech adoption,” said Mike Langellier, CEO of TechPoint, a local tech advocacy group and accelerator.
Ironically, Symes is allergic to bee stings. She has been stung a few times while working with bees and often carries an EpiPen with her in case she needs to counteract an allergic reaction. But these days, she spends most of her time running the company. She’s far less likely to be working around the buzzing hives, which are usually encased in wooden boxes slightly larger than a standard wood crate.
Source: IBJ