FORTNA designs and delivers intelligent automation for high-throughput distribution - omnichannel retail, parcel networks, the physical logistics layer that keeps goods moving. The threat model here isn't adversarial code; it's operational disruption. When a distribution center goes down or a sorting algorithm misroutes thousands of parcels per hour, the blast radius is measured in real dollars and missed delivery windows. The company's technical stack spans proprietary algorithms, data science, and robotics, built to orchestrate end-to-end solutions from network strategy through distribution center design and automated equipment.
The work touches automation systems that control physical machinery and software that coordinates complex logistics flows - domains where a misconfigured integration or unhandled edge case can cascade across a supply chain. FORTNA partners with leading brands to transform their distribution operations, which means the engineering surface area includes everything from strategic planning down to lifecycle services on deployed hardware and software.
Culture-wise, the company signals accountability and cross-organizational collaboration, with stated values around safety, integrity, inclusivity, and transparency. For cybersecurity practitioners, the interesting tension is straightforward: industrial control systems, proprietary software, and robotic platforms operating at scale create a dense attack surface that demands both OT and IT fluency - securing the machines that move physical goods, not just the data about them.