Founded by two former Queen鈥檚 students, Mero Technologies has flourished thanks to its support from the university鈥檚 innovation ecosystem.

How can you tell when innovation is working? Easy. You don鈥檛 notice it. Walk into the washroom in any large commercial building where their technology is in use, and you鈥檒l see full soap and paper towel dispensers, and plenty of toilet paper in the stalls. All thanks to the sensors and platform they have developed that monitor these products, which send a message via the cloud to the cleaners when they are running low. It鈥檚 not glamorous. In fact, it鈥檚 downright mundane 鈥 but in a good way. If they weren鈥檛 there, we would definitely miss them. But what is amazing is how far Mero鈥檚 founders, first as Queen鈥檚 University students and now as graduates, have taken their product from its earliest stages in just five years. Listening to their potential customers, and seeking and heeding advice they gained in the Queen鈥檚 innovation ecosystem, has helped them grow, gain a US patent on their technology (as of this April) and now has them poised on the brink of major success.

Nathan Mah and Cole MacDonald
Mero Technologies founders Nathan Mah (L) and Cole MacDonald (R).
Photo courtesy of Mero Technologies.

Co-founder Nathan Mah still remembers the day he didn鈥檛 meet his future business partner, Cole MacDonald. In 2017, Mah was enrolled in the at .

鈥淎s part of class we were given the opportunity to meet engineering students and get exposed to different research projects,鈥 he says. The day that MacDonald, an electrical engineering student at Queen鈥檚 came in to show off the sensor he鈥檇 developed, Mah wasn鈥檛 there. A friend told him about it, however, 鈥渁nd I knew immediately that this was the idea that I wanted to pursue.鈥

From the beginning, there was one point the two agreed on. While a lot of prospective entrepreneurs lock in on the money they can make, they had a different focus. 鈥淔or us, it was about how much of a problem does this actually solve for real-life customers?鈥 In fact, as it turns out, it solved quite a problem, and one that went beyond user convenience. To make sure that washrooms are always properly supplied, many cleaners and property managers have a pre-emptive approach to stocking them 鈥 if there is only a quarter-roll of toilet paper or a half-roll of paper towels in place, they throw it away and replace it with a new one to make sure they don鈥檛 run out. Mero鈥檚 innovation would cut down on waste, saving money and the environment in the process.

Ensconced in Queens Innovation Park by 2017, as part of the Canada Accelerator and Incubator Program (CAIP), the two embarked on what Mah calls a two-year process of customer validation and research and development. 鈥淲e spent whole days in some of those Innovation Park meeting rooms picking up the phone and dialing potential customers,鈥 says Mah (Innovation Park also gave them room to tinker with their product and let them use its washrooms as an informal test bed for their sensors).

They quickly discovered that who they had thought would be their key customers, property management firms, were a hard sell. But that the cleaning companies that worked for them weren鈥檛.

鈥淲e kind of joked that the biggest innovation in commercial cleaning had been the micro-fibre cloth back in the 1980s. There鈥檇 never really been a technology directed at them, so we had a willing audience,鈥 he says. The insights they gained from connecting with them, they used to further improve their technology.

Throughout this period they continued to work closely with Queen鈥檚 Partnerships and Innovation (QPI). They enrolled in QPI鈥檚 DiscoverXL program followed by the GrindSpaceXL accelerator program, both offered by QPI as part of the Eastern Ontario CAIP initiative, as well as 鈥渁lmost anything that was available to us as a resource,鈥 says Nathan.

Although the company and founders moved to Toronto in 2019, they have kept their connections with QPI and the Eastern Ontario entrepreneurial network. In fact, thanks to his participation on a panel held at Innovation Park, Mah was able to connect with Stephen Scribner, patent agent and QPI鈥檚 Director, Intellectual Property. Working with Scribner over the past four years to create and execute on a patent strategy, Mero has since secured one US patent to cover the software and its attendant server that communicates with the sensor and are working on a second, intended to cover the sensor itself. In the end, says Scribner, 鈥淢ero will have a nice patent portfolio, where at least two patents are going to largely cover their technology.鈥

QPI has provided patent services to Mero as part of the , with funding support from the , through in Eastern Ontario (with which Queen鈥檚 is a regional partner).

Today Mero Technologies employs 21 people (many of them Queen鈥檚 graduates). They were able to raise $3.5 million in capital in August 2021, and have also received funding from the Ontario branch of the Federal Development Bank, which Mah calls 鈥渁 great boon.鈥 And while funding is always important for a new company, these days Mero Technologies is focusing on future growth. 鈥淔or our next steps, it鈥檚 really about growing this and scaling it and taking our technology into every commercial building across North America. Definitely these are big ambitions, but we really think that what we have fits a market need,鈥 says Mah.

Why so far so fast? 鈥淚 think the synergy between them is really part of their 鈥榮ecret sauce,鈥欌 says Rick Boswell, Assistant Director, Programs and Operations, at Queen鈥檚 Partnerships and Innovation. 鈥淭hey work so well together and respect each other鈥檚 skill sets and what each of them brings to the table.鈥

For his part, Mah credits a lot of their success to Queen鈥檚. 鈥淲e had a really unique trajectory in that we weren鈥檛 thrown directly into Toronto. We had a lot of early-stage support from Queen鈥檚. I don鈥檛 think a lot of Toronto companies get that kind of support, because it鈥檚 much more competitive here, there鈥檚 a lot more companies, and there鈥檚 just fewer resources to go around.鈥