WASHINGTON — The Defense Innovation Unit, the Pentagon’s outreach arm to the tech industry, has hired AI startup Obviant to help the military make sense of its own spending, according to a company announcement.
The first user planned is DIU itself, but if Obviant’s prototype proves successful, the contract includes options to roll it out across the armed services and the inter-service Combatant Commands.
Obviant will build different tools, workflows, and visualizations customized to the needs of different users across DoD, Obviant CEO and cofounder Brendan Karp told Breaking Defense. The full package should “help combatant commands and services map needs to capabilities and funding,” he said in an email, and “help [defense officials] work together to provide successful company capabilities with transition pathways” from R&D to full-scale procurement.
The contract, which was announced Wednesday but awarded Sept. 24, runs through the end of 2026 and has a maximum value, if the government exercises all options, of $99 million. That’s a large contract for Obviant, which was founded in 2023 and whose seed funding round this summer raised a comparatively modest $7.1 million. The round’s lead investor was Shield Capital, whose partners happen to include former DIU director Michael Brown.
“Selling to the DoD has been difficult because there is no real-time ‘single source of truth’ about spending on defense mission capabilities or new technologies,” Brown said in a press release at the time. “Obviant’s solution unlocks better understanding of the spending on these capabilities.”
How does that work? The company’s current, commercially available software draws on open-source intelligence (OSINT), ranging from Senate hearings to program briefings. Clients can add their proprietary data as well. Obviant’s AI then takes all that data and tries to identify trendlines, opportunities, and potential problems.
DIU’s contract with Obviant envisions combining public data and internal DoD data, “providing a comprehensive picture,” Karp explained to Breaking Defense. In essence, the company plans to take the core of the current platform — its AI “data engine” and its capability to pull in continually updated OSINT data — and integrate data feeds from the Defense Department’s own internal sources.
Modernizing defense enterprise IT without disrupting the mission
Government can’t stop to update systems, so modernization has to happen without interruptions.
DIU did not respond to Breaking Defense’s queries about this contract.
One big question Obviant declined to answer: How does their AI platform relate to Advana, DoD’s in-house data platform? Run by the Pentagon’s Chief Digital and AI Office, Advana’s comprehensive data and AI analytics have won over officials across the department, with the user base tripling in three years to about 100,000. That rapid expansion came with growing pains, however, and as recently as April, CDAO was working on plans to restructure and stabilize Advana as a formal program of record. But since then, CDAO has lost key personnel to DOGE’s cuts, lost its direct access to the defense secretary in recent reorganizations, and paused a major Advana upgrade.
Advana and Obviant could prove valuable complements to each other, covering different but overlapping areas: Advana includes military readiness data and other information beyond just acquisition, while Obviant focuses on acquisition but will pull data from both inside and outside the DoD. But eventually, the two programs could also become competitors.