IROKO TECHNOLOGIES · EST. 2025 · BOSTON
The world is getting more complex. Enterprises need clearer sight lines.
Iroko was founded by people who spent decades inside some of the most complex operating environments in financial services — managing global operations, leading data strategy, and protecting trillions in assets through periods of real disruption.
The pattern they kept seeing was structural. Enterprises were becoming faster, more connected, and more volatile, but the tools meant to manage that complexity had not kept up. Critical data lived in silos. Operational intelligence was fragmented. When something broke, the full picture was always assembled too late — and almost never from a single failure. It was the dependencies, the second-order exposures, the connections nobody had mapped.
Iroko builds for operational reality — software that respects how organizations actually operate, and turns that reality into something teams can act on.
Foresight is not optional. It is infrastructure.
The Iroko tree.
Milicia excelsa

A hardwood in the Moraceae family native to tropical Africa, primarily found across West and parts of Central and East Africa (occurring from Sierra Leone and scattered populations as far east as Kenya and Uganda). Mature trees typically reach 20–30 m, with trunks up to ~2 m diameter at breast height. The heartwood is dense (≈640 kg/m³), termite-resistant, and often contains calcium-carbonate deposits that increase its durability. In undisturbed primary forest, individual trees can live for up to about 500 years.
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