Built in Columbus. Built for regional carriers.
Columbus, Ohio is one of the most active logistics hubs in North America — home to major distribution networks, USPS processing, and a dense ecosystem of regional carriers. Infralo started here because the problem of failed last-mile delivery isn't academic — it's the daily operational reality of the carriers we work alongside.
Simone Kaufmann
CEO & Founder
Simone's background is in logistics operations and software — she spent time working on fleet dispatch systems at an independent logistics software company before founding Infralo in 2025.
The idea came from a specific frustration: routing software kept optimizing distance, but dispatchers knew that the sequence failure wasn't geographic, it was about whether someone would be home. Infralo is the product she wanted to build but couldn't inside someone else's roadmap.
She's based in Columbus — which is both where Infralo is headquartered and one of the best test environments in the country for last-mile logistics software, given the density of regional carriers operating out of central Ohio.
The Team
Four people, one focus.
Infralo is a small team — by design. Focused exclusively on the last-mile sequencing problem for regional carriers, without the overhead of enterprise SaaS.
Why Columbus
The logistics capital of the Midwest.
Columbus sits at the intersection of I-70 and I-71 — the logistics crossroads of the eastern United States. More than 50% of the U.S. population is within a 10-hour drive. That makes it one of the most active test environments for last-mile delivery innovation in the country.
Regional carriers based out of Columbus operate some of the most representative last-mile routes in the US — dense suburban zones, mixed residential and commercial stops, and a competitive environment that makes delivery efficiency a real margin issue. Infralo was built alongside these operators, not in a lab.