On It
Stage: Pre-launchDocumenting interest only — no money is being collected. No securities are being offered.Phase 1 · Arkansas-onlyWhat's real today →
Northwest Arkansas · Pre-launch

The American Dreamof the Future.

A community-owned cooperative · stewarded by On It Robotics

We took the private-equity playbook and wired it back into the neighborhood.

Same machine. No greed.

Robotics, hardware and software are about to reshape every yard, every utility bill, every line item in your county budget. The only question left is who owns the upside. Our answer: the people who live here, work here, and pay the bills here.

Every dollar, percent, name and date on this site is target / planned / illustrative. Pre-launch disclaimer.

Catalyst, not conclusion

This cooperative is designed so that even if On It Robotics steps away, the model keeps working — and the faster other towns fork it, the better. We're in Pre-launch and documenting interest only. See what's real today →

Here's how to help
Pre-launch · documenting interest only

Five things we actually need right now.

Pick the one that fits. No money is collected here — these are interest signals so the first Pods get scoped to the people who actually want them.

What we believe

Robotics will be monopolized, strategically priced, and phased to keep you buying.

That's not a prediction — that's the playbook every Wall Street fund is already running. We're not fighting the machine. We're wiring into it and removing the greed.

Greedless Grid

Member-owned. Transparent ledger. No out-of-state shareholder line item siphoning the upside.

Patronage, not extraction

Margin earned in Northwest Arkansas circulates back to the patrons, workers, and community that produced it.

Urban Recovery Mining

The long arc: recover the lithium, cobalt, and nickel — and give them back to the people who paid for them.

The Unit · where this is headed

One word for everything we deploy: the Unit.

A Unit is any robot the cooperative enables a neighbor to own or operate for the public good. Today it's a mower. Tomorrow it's a 3-D printer in the garage making the part your dishwasher needs. Next, it's a robotic 3-D house printer that lays a foundation and walls in a weekend — shelter, without the developer markup. Same playbook. Same ledger. Same patronage rule. The mower is just the door we opened first.

Any vetted Privateer can own or lease a Unit — with the proper training, approvals, and safety sign-off. We're not selling robots. We're enabling opportunity: the right to put a productive machine to work in your own neighborhood, under rules your neighbors helped write.

Unit · Live today
Robotic Mower

The first Unit. A mowed yard, billed by the outcome. Proves the model that funds everything below.

Unit · Planned
Garage 3-D Printer

A vetted desktop / workshop printer in a Privateer's garage. Makes replacement parts, brackets, jigs — for the fleet first, then for neighbors who need a $4 part the box store doesn't stock.

Unit · Planned
Robotic 3-D House Printer

The endgame Unit. A trained, approved Privateer prints foundation and wall systems on site — shelter for us, without the speculative markup. Cooperative-owned crews, member-priced builds.

The two-sided asset · the trick the public never gets

One Unit. Two balance sheets.

Every Unit we deploy is two assets stacked inside one chassis. The shell — motors, blades, plastic, sensors — is a classic depreciating asset: it wears out, gets written down, eventually retires. The core — the lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper and rare-earths bolted inside it — is an appreciating asset: a finite, strategically scarce commodity the state and federal government will pay us to recover, refine, and reintroduce as local energy storage. That's a recycling check, a clean-energy tax incentive, and a battery feedstock — all from the same machine that already paid for itself mowing yards.

This is the private-equity playbook in plain sight: own the depreciating cash-flow asset and the appreciating underlying commodity. Wall Street funds run this stack every day. The general public has never had access to it. The cooperative does — and the upside flows to the patrons, workers, and community that produced it. Same machine. No greed.

Side A · depreciating
The shell that pays the bills

Chassis, motors, blades, sensors. Subscribed yards generate monthly cash flow that services the OEM lease line, pays the Pod, and funds the hub. By the time the shell is written down, it has already paid for itself — many times over.

Side B · appreciating
The core that funds the future

Lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, rare-earths. The state pays to recycle it. Federal clean-energy incentives stack on top. Refined material is reintroduced locally as community energy storage — earning another round of tax credits and keeping the strategic supply where the people who paid for it actually live.

Tax-incentive amounts, recycling-program participation, and urban-recovery-mining timing are all target / planned / illustrative at this stage. See the pre-launch disclaimer and lithium lifecycle for the long-arc detail.

The signal so far

What's already moving toward the cooperative.

0
ZIPs
asking for service
0
BYO robots
registered for routing
0
suppliers
in technical review
0
interest list
waiting for the bell

Counts update as new interest, registrations, and supplier submissions come in. Aggregates only — no personal information shown.

An invitation

A choice to invest in us instead of Wall Street.

This isn't a campaign. It isn't a fund. It's the structural workaround — built so the next twenty years of automation flow through Northwest Arkansas, not out of it.

Class A · Patron
You use the service

Subscribers and customers. Patronage is intended to convert into cooperative membership at launch.

Class B · Worker
You operate or build it

Privateers, Apprentices, hub staff, software contributors. Worker membership is intended to follow launch.

Class C · Community
You hold the line locally

Schools, civic orgs, supporters — represented in governance to keep the platform locally rooted.

"I couldn't have had this kind of impact in a race that was already chosen."

So we built the cooperative instead. Same machine. No greed. Wired into the neighborhood — for the kids who'll inherit the bill.