Exclusive: Manufacturing platform Keychain raises $15 million in Series A funds, including from the maker of iconic breakfast cereals

Keychain cofounders Jordan Weitz (L), Oisin Hanrahan (center), and Umang Dua (R). · Fortune · JJ Ignotz Photography

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Manufacturing platform Keychain completed a $15 million Series A round of fundraising, which values the startup at just over $250 million, according to a source close to the company.

Early stage venture capital firm BoxGroup led the round with a $10 million investment. Existing venture capital investors Lightspeed Venture Partners and SV Angel participated as well. Keychain also raised money from companies that use the platform, including packaged food giant General Mills and the dairy manufacturer Schreiber Foods. This investment comes on the heels of a $2.5 million investment from Hershey in October.

“We're adding people to our cap table that we know, that we trust, that can add enormous value, that see the potential for building a category defining company,” Keychain CEO and cofounder Oisin Hanrahan told Fortune in an exclusive interview announcing the raise.

The Series A money, which comes after an initial seed investment last year, brings Keychain’s total funding to $33 million. The deals with investors closed "within the last month," according to Hanrahan.

Keychain is an online platform that connects food and beverage consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies with manufacturers that can make their products. CPG brands and retailers that have their own private-label brands can use the platform to search for manufacturers that have the capabilities to make specific products. For example, a retailer that wants to launch a store brand organic granola bar or a beverage company that wants to produce a new flavor of sparkling water.

“The core thesis was simple. It was, we're going to build a new operating system for manufacturing,” Hanrahan said. “We're going to build a new way for brands and retailers to work with manufacturers to make product.”

General Mills decided to invest in Keychain because of its own experience using the platform, which shortened the timelines for manufacturing certain products, General Mills chief supply chain officer Paul Gallagher said.

"This tool will facilitate efficiencies in how brands identify and connect to potential co-manufacturers, from weeks or months to minutes—and that’s incredibly important as consumer demands evolve," Gallagher said. "We’re investing in Keychain because of the efficiencies it can enable for us, its significant potential impact on the future of food, and their approach to collaboration.”

Based in New York, Keychain currently has over 20,000 brands and retailers on the platform and facilitates $500 million worth of projects each month, the company said in a press release.