🔺30 Most Innovative Tech Companies to Watch 2025

Iomico Builds Custom IoT Systems for Industries Worldwide

We built a team where hardware engineers, software developers, and designers work side by side, allowing ideas to flow across disciplines and enabling faster problem solving.

iomico, builds, custom, iot, systems, industries, worldwide

Mikalaj Murziankou, Co-Founder & CTO, Iomico

BY SME Business Review

Iomico is a full-cycle IoT engineering company that works across sectors including agriculture, automotive, and healthcare. The company handles everything from hardware design and embedded firmware to edge analytics, cloud integration, and industrial design. With development centres in the United States, Poland, and Argentina, Iomico partners with clients who need more than a device.

The company was built on the idea that technology should serve practical purposes rather than remain locked in labs or slide decks. That mindset continues to shape how Iomico approaches projects, whether it is designing wireless infrastructure, enabling over-the-air updates for remote devices, or supporting manufacturing with dependable processes.

Mikalaj Murziankou, co-founder, serves as the Chief Technology Officer of the company.

The Early Vision

When asked about how the company came to life, Mikalaj described a frustration that many engineers share.

“We saw too many projects that looked impressive in theory but never made it into the field. Businesses wanted IoT to work, yet they often lacked a partner that could bring all the parts together. We felt we could close that gap by combining electronics, software, and design into one cycle.”

That early conviction became the foundation for Iomico’s model. The company does not simply hand over prototypes. Instead, it commits to building systems that can withstand real-world conditions and scale with demand.

Making Technology Work in Practice

Iomico focuses on solutions that are useful rather than experimental. Mikalaj explained that the company works closely with partners in agriculture, where precision sensors and wireless tracking can reduce waste and improve crop management. In automotive, they develop components and embedded systems that support connected vehicles. For smart city projects, they design infrastructure that can manage sensors, lighting, and energy use efficiently.

“Our approach is hands-on. We design the circuits, write the firmware, and ensure the devices connect securely. At the same time, we focus on the bigger picture. If a client needs a mobile interface or a cloud dashboard, we build that too. We make sure there are no gaps between the hardware and the user.”

This end-to-end involvement is what sets the company apart. Many firms focus on only one layer, but Iomico insists that the real value lies in integrating all parts.

Working with Clients

The company has delivered projects across different regions and industries. Mikalaj pointed out that success often comes down to listening before building.

“Every client comes in with a unique challenge. Some are struggling with legacy systems, others are looking to bring an entirely new product to market. Our job is not to push them into a fixed model. We adapt the process so the technology serves their goals, not the other way around.”

That flexibility has allowed Iomico to work with startups as well as established companies. A startup might need a proof-of-concept device that can be field-tested within months, while a larger corporation may require a robust design that aligns with strict compliance and manufacturing standards.

Building a Global Team

Operating across three continents gives Iomico the ability to respond quickly. Development centres in the United States, Poland, and Argentina allow the team to draw from diverse talent pools and time zones.

Mikalaj emphasized that culture plays a central role. “We built a team where hardware engineers, software developers, and designers work side by side, allowing ideas to flow across disciplines and enabling faster problem solving. When everyone sits at the same table, you can anticipate issues earlier and avoid the delays that usually come when teams are siloed.”

Why Integration Matters

IoT often fails when systems are built in isolation. A device may work in the lab but falter once deployed. Data might be collected but never translated into insights. Updates may be needed but cannot be delivered without pulling devices out of the field.

Iomico addresses this by treating integration as a discipline. Hardware is designed with the software in mind. Cloud dashboards are created with input from the people who will actually use them. Manufacturing support is considered from the beginning, so devices can move smoothly from prototype to production.

“Our clients rely on us because they do not want surprises halfway through a rollout,” Mikalaj said. “By considering integration from the first step, we make sure the final system does what it is supposed to do and can keep doing it.”

Overcoming Industry Hurdles

The IoT space has often been criticized for overpromising and underdelivering. Mikalaj acknowledged this openly.

“Too often people get caught up in hype. They say IoT will change everything overnight. But in reality, building reliable systems takes patience, testing, and discipline. We avoid buzzwords because they do not help a client who just wants a sensor to work in harsh weather or a device to run securely for years.

That pragmatic approach has shaped Iomico’s reputation. Clients know the company will not oversell. Instead, it will focus on delivering what works.

The Role of Design

Another key part of Iomico’s model is industrial design. Devices not only need to function but also fit into the environments where they are used. This can mean designing enclosures that protect sensors from dust and water, or creating user interfaces that make sense to people who are not engineers.

“Design is not decoration,” Mikalaj explained. “It is about making the product usable and durable. If a farmer has to spend too much time trying to figure out how a device works, then it is not a good design. We think about these things from the start.”

Building for Scale

Many IoT projects fail to grow beyond pilot programs. Iomico addresses this by ensuring that prototypes are built with manufacturing in mind. Circuit boards are designed so they can be produced efficiently. Firmware is written to allow for remote updates. Support systems are put in place so clients can expand without re-inventing everything.

Mikalaj stressed that scaling is not about big numbers alone. “For us, it means that when a client is ready to go from fifty devices to five thousand, the process should not collapse. It should be just as reliable.”

What is Next for Iomico

Iomico plans to expand its presence in industries that demand long-term reliability. Healthcare devices that monitor patients, energy systems that need to run without interruption, and smart city infrastructure that supports entire communities are all areas of focus.

Mikalaj noted that the company will continue to invest in edge AI and advanced wireless technologies but always with the same philosophy. “We want to build systems that last. Our focus is on solving real problems for industries and communities. That is how we see Iomico growing in the years ahead.”

We do not see IoT as a buzzword. For us, it is a way of connecting ideas with outcomes.