Two AC Grads Named to Deloitte’s Fast 50 list

Magnet Forensics and Miovision continue to show incredible growth and impact

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This article originally appeard in The Record

Six firms in Waterloo Region are on this year’s list of Canada’s fastest growing technology companies.

Magnet Forensics, Miovision Technologies, Aeryon Labs, Dejero Labs, eSentire, and Igloo Software are on Deloitte’s Technology Fast 50 list, which is based on revenue growth over the previous four years.

Magnet, a Waterloo provider of digital forensics tools, is eighth on the list with four-year revenue growth of 1,154 per cent.

Miovision, a Kitchener company that develops traffic data collection and analysis systems, ranks 32nd with revenue growth of 305 per cent.

Waterloo drone maker Aeryon ranks 10th with revenue growth of 1,032 per cent.

Dejero, a Waterloo firm that provides a platform for live-to-air broadcasting, is 18th with revenue growth of 590 per cent.

Cambridge-based eSentire, a provider of cybersecurity tools and services, is 42nd with revenue growth of 202 per cent.

Igloo, a Kitchener firm that develops social networking software for businesses, ranks 45th with revenue growth of 159 per cent.

Topping this year’s list is Frank & Oak, a Montreal-based menswear brand and online retailer. It had revenue growth of 18,480 per cent.

Deloitte said the companies on the Fast 50 list achieved average growth of 1,293 per cent.

Ontario is home to 23 of the companies on the 50 list. There are 13 from Quebec, 10 from British Columbia, two from Alberta, and one each from Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan.

TrustPoint Innovation Technologies [another AC Graduate], a Waterloo startup that develops products for secure machine to machine communications, is among 12 firms on Deloitte’s companies to watch list.

This year’s survey of Fast 50 CEOs indicated that securing talent is a significant issue for two-thirds of the companies on the list.

“Young Canadian tech companies from coast to coast are experiencing staggering growth,” Robert Nardi, Deloitte’s technology, media and telecommunications managing partner, said in a news release.

“However, for these firms to maintain their trajectory they need to have the right talent mix. For today’s fast-growing companies, finding and attracting talent is of great importance.”

Miovision a Canadian tech exporting success story

“Congestion, traffic, it’s a global problem….”

Tony+Brijpaul+-+Miovision+2“…It’s not specific to North America or Europe or any particular country or city,” says Kitchener, Ont.-based Miovision Technologies Inc.’s chief operating officer Tony Brijpaul. “When we started Miovision, we always knew we would become an export-focused business.”

Founded in 2005, Miovision was conceived by Mr. Brijpaul and co-founders Kurtis McBride and Kevin Madill after Mr. McBride had spent summers as a University of Waterloo student at a job sitting on a lawn chair, holding a clipboard and counting cars.

While it was a cushy summer job, it was a crude way to gather data for smart cities of the future, says Mr. McBride: “[It’s] a manual and time-intensive process, not to mention frequently inaccurate. Cities would make road construction decisions with 30-year implications based on potentially bad data.”

A decade later, Miovision has about 600 customers in about 50 countries, with a sales satellite office in Cologne, Germany. “We’re in every continent except Antarctica,” Mr. Brijpaul says.

Read the full article in the Globe and Mail.