When we first met Zac Duff and Numa Bertron in 2020, JigSpace was a small team with an outsized vision: that 3D would become the default format for explaining anything complex – products, ideas, surgery, machinery. Most of the world was still on PowerPoint.
Zac and Numa met teaching game development in Australia in 2014, and had been quietly building a real-time 3D engine for years. The product was loved by a small but loyal group of technical presenters, and they had a wedge (pharma reps) that was willing to pay real money for a real answer.
Four years on, JigSpace was Apple's launch partner for the Vision Pro, demonstrating an animated F1 car onstage. Every trajectory looked aggressive on paper; all of them turned out to be conservative.
Today JigSpace has found its wedge in heavy industry — the firms that build the large, complex, expensive machinery behind the resurgence of onshore manufacturing and the data-centre buildout. Jig is how they train, sell and support those products, and training has become its fastest-growing use case. In a world where the biggest opportunity and the biggest risk are both speed, customers like EVAPCO, Fujifilm, IKN and Provisur use Jig to move faster, with fewer costly errors.
Rampersand led JigSpace's Series A with Investible to expand its 3D/AR presentation platform.
Rampersand and Investible re-upped, timed to Apple Vision Pro launch.
Breakthrough Victoria led with Aura and Anorak Ventures; Rampersand followed on.
JigSpace's enterprise motion locks onto industrial manufacturers — HVAC and data-centre cooling, energy, medtech — and training on complex assemblies becomes its fastest-growing use case.
Board director since 2024. On the calls through JigSpace's enterprise inflection – from the Apple Vision Pro launch to the wedge into heavy-industry workflows.