Mujin establishes Global Leadership Cabinet to align, expand MujinOS

According to Mujin, MujinOS includes a real-time digital twin, a continuously updating model of the physical environment shown on a teach pendant.
MujinOS includes a real-time digital twin, a continuously updating model of the physical environment. Source: Mujin

Mujin Corp. yesterday announced that it has established a Global Leadership Cabinet to unify its operations worldwide and drive the commercial expansion of its flagship MujinOS platform. The company said the cabinet will align technology, product, sales, and governance functions across all regions, positioning it for its next phase of growth and long-term strategic plans. 

“Mujin has always operated at the frontier of automation,” stated Ross Diankov, co-founder of Mujin. “We’ve shown that intelligence can be built directly into machines, and we’re proving that this approach can scale across the world’s most demanding industries. Now it’s time to make MujinOS the global standard.” 

Tokyo-based Mujin develops systems to enable industrial robots to perform complex tasks with speed, reliability, and flexibility. The company claimed that MujinOS, eliminates the need for teaching or coding by empowering robots with real-time decision-making capabilities.

At at ProMat 2025, Mujin introduced MujinFleet for configuring and managing mobile robots. At Automate, it debuted a new user interface to simplify robotic palletizing.

MujinOS brings digital twins to a range of applications

At the core of MujinOS is a real-time digital twin, a continuously updating model of a robot’s physical environment, explained Mujin. The “no-code” technology allows robots to plan and adapt in real time without the need to directly program behaviors, it said.

By integrating motion planning, perception, and control into a single intelligent platform, the company said MujinOS enables robots to respond dynamically to real-world variability for new levels of performance, reliability, and autonomy across a wide range of applications.

MujinOS includes applications for vision, order execution, fleet management, robot motion, parts management, and controls interfacing.

Mujin said its architecture has earned the trust of Fortune 100 customers, top systems integrators, and leading robot OEMs, many of which have incorporated MujinOS into their growth strategies. Today, it noted, more than 1,000 robots across logistics and manufacturing environments around the world use MujinOS.

Mujin continues global march

With offices in Atlanta, Europe, and China, Mujin said it delivers advanced warehouse automation and “products powering end-to-end robotics solutions.” In Japan, Mujin takes a consultancy approach to automation, deploying robots across piece picking, bin picking, depalletizing, and warehouse-level orchestration.

Mujin said its U.S. team focuses on commercialization and field-proven deployments with some of the most recognizable companies in logistics and manufacturing, validating MujinOS in high-throughput environments.

In Europe, Mujin asserted that it has successfully deployed systems for automated baggage loading at airports, as well as dual-arm, mixed-SKU palletizing solutions. Meanwhile, its China office supports large-scale deployments, demonstrating MujinOS’s scalability and adaptability in highly dynamic facilities. 

The company noted that each region is attracting the top talent for product development, sales, engineering, and operations to drive product maturity and assure quality through rigorous testing. Mujin’s team has also demonstrated the value of MujinOS to major manufacturers, logistics organizations, and top integration firms.

MujinOS includes a fleet manager, with a warehouse screenshot shown here by Mujin.
MujinOS includes a Fleet Manager. Source: Mujin

GLC to build the future of intelligent automation

Mujin said its Global Leadership Cabinet (GLC) will unify global strategy and execution, ensuring that product development and commercialization efforts remain tightly aligned and supported by centralized governance across all markets. As part of this initiative, Mujin will implement global key performance indicators (KPIs) and establish new structures for cross-regional collaboration. 

“To bring intelligent automation to every corner of the world, we need more than just groundbreaking technology; we need structure, clarity, and global alignment,” said Issei Takino, co-founder of Mujin. “The formation of the GLC ensures that every function across Mujin is moving in sync, focused on accessibility, growth, and long-term partnerships with our customers.” 

“Mujin was founded on a shared belief that robotics needed a new kind of platform, one that could make autonomy real, scalable, and accessible,” said the company. “That vision, developed by Ross Diankov and Issei Takino, continues to drive the company forward as it enters its next phase of global growth. Now, with this new structure in place, the same core leadership is joined by a team of experts whose strengths are tightly aligned with Mujin’s mission.”

The company did not name the GLC members as of press time, but Automated Warehouse will update this article if they become available.

“The formation of the Global Leadership Cabinet marks the next stage in Mujin’s evolution as the company scaling intelligent robotics for the real world,” said Mujin. “With a unified structure driving product, technology, and commercialization forward, Mujin is accelerating global sales, strengthening partnerships, attracting world-class talent, and advancing the maturity of its MujinOS platform.”

“The world is watching Mujin, and what we do next will shape the future of automation,” Diankov added. “Our mission is simple: put intelligent robotics within reach for every integrator, every warehouse, and every factory on Earth—and we now have the team and structure to make that happen.”

Written by

Automated Warehouse Staff