DeepFabric has launched its AI agent platform for supply chain execution into general availability, opening a library of 50-plus agents to buyers. Six customers are already in production: NFI, Kenco, HelloFresh, TwinMed, Merchants Fleet and Weber.
The Dallas company adds task-specific AI agents to existing workflows. It pitches the platform as a way to recover margin and cut operating costs without replacing existing systems.
What it does: The agents cover operations, financial control, assurance and growth. The three most deployed so far each take on a manual, error-prone job:
Freight Auditor audits carrier invoices
Proposal Manager handles RFP responses
Inventory Manager handles inventory tasks
How it works: Agents read documents, flag exceptions and route work to a person for review. Every output shows how the agent reached its conclusion. A new agent can go live within a day, DeepFabric says, because it does not require internal engineering or a data cleanup project to start.
Early results: The six production customers span third party logistics with NFI and Kenco, meal kits and grocery with HelloFresh, medical supply with TwinMed, fleet management with Merchants Fleet, and manufacturing with Weber.
DeepFabric and its customers report up to 10x ROI on freight audit, a 45% cut in audit spend, and RFP response times down by up to 30%. The company did not provide customer specific results.
“AI becomes valuable when it’s connected to real work and measured against outcomes supply chain leaders care about: revenue, margin, cost, and service,” CEO Kalyan Kommineni said.
DeepFabric’s flagship freight audit agent enters a market that Mordor Intelligence sizes at $970 million, projected to reach $1.89 billion by 2030.






