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AIVideosJames Kellet Interview: Experience on Introducing Tech Solution Into a Traditional Industry
Management ConsultingManagementAISaaSTransportationSupply Chain

James Kellet Interview: Experience on Introducing Tech Solution Into a Traditional Industry

•March 2, 2026
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INSEAD (institutional)
INSEAD (institutional)•Mar 2, 2026

Why It Matters

The surge of AI‑focused investment in shipping signals a transformative wave that will reshape logistics, create new revenue streams for tech firms, and force traditional players to modernize or fall behind.

Key Takeaways

  • •Shipping once resisted tech, now embraces digital solutions.
  • •COVID-driven rate surge unlocked capital for maritime tech investments.
  • •Venture funds label maritime as hottest sector for AI startups.
  • •SpotShip positions itself as AI application layer, not model creator.
  • •Verticalized AI will dominate next decade across traditional industries.

Summary

James Kellet discusses how a traditionally stubborn shipping sector is finally opening to technology, recounting his early attempts to replace manual Excel sheets and leather notebooks with digital tools. He notes that the industry’s reputation for being "stodgy" is rapidly changing, especially after COVID‑driven freight rate spikes gave firms the cash to invest in modern solutions.

The interview highlights three forces driving this shift: soaring rates during the pandemic, a flood of venture capital branding maritime as the next AI gold rush, and the emergence of specialized firms like SpotShip that focus on applying, rather than building, cutting‑edge models. Kellet stresses that SpotShip acts as the application layer, testing and packaging AI for immediate client use, sidestepping the massive R&D costs of companies like OpenAI.

Kellet cites a senior shipbroker who once refused to trust Excel, preferring a leather notebook, as a vivid example of entrenched skepticism. He also references Andreessen Horowitz’s 2024 label of shipping as one of the hottest venture sectors, underscoring the rapid influx of growth‑PE funds with maritime theses.

The broader implication is a sea change for an industry long seen as low‑tech: investors now view maritime AI as a high‑growth arena, while incumbents must adopt verticalized solutions to stay competitive. Companies that can translate generic AI into ship‑specific applications stand to capture significant market share over the next decade.

Original Description

James Kellet (MBA’20J) Co-Founder & CEO of Spot Ship, a SaaS platform that uses artificial intelligence to modernise the global ship chartering process. The platform aims to reduce the time required to "fix" a ship from several days to just a few hours by automating the processing of unstructured data.
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