KPMG Canada Acquires LlamaZOO to Expand AI-Driven Digital Twin Capabilities

KPMG Canada Acquires LlamaZOO to Expand AI-Driven Digital Twin Capabilities
Source: LlamaZOO Interactive via Cision Newswire
  • KPMG in Canada has acquired the assets and technology of LlamaZOO Interactive to enhance its digital twin and spatial business intelligence offerings.
  • The integration strengthens KPMG’s capacity for real-time scenario planning and immersive decision-making tools across key industries.

LlamaZOO Interactive, a spatial business intelligence software developer, has been acquired by KPMG in Canada. The move brings new tools to KPMG's portfolio, aimed at helping clients visualize and interact with complex data across real-time platforms.

With over a decade of experience, LlamaZOO builds interactive 2D and 3D digital twins that help organizations engage with complex data. These systems are now part of KPMG's Digital Twin Centre of Excellence, overseen by Matt Grant.

Leaders from both firms emphasized the benefits of integrating KPMG's artificial intelligence strengths with LlamaZOO's data visualization capabilities. The acquisition also integrates into KPMG's Agentic AI Engine, enabling more advanced simulation and planning environments. LlamaZOO’s seven-member team, including co-founders Charles Lavigne and Kevin Oke, will join KPMG’s Ignition hub in Victoria.

“The addition of LlamaZOO’s technology and expertise allows KPMG to combine its artificial intelligence discipline with real-time 2D and 3D digital twin technologies. This positions KPMG to support Canadian and global organizations with immersive tools that enable intelligent decision-making, scenario planning and analysis,” says Matt Grant, Director of Digital Twins and Spatial Computing at KPMG in Canada, in a KPMG newsroom article.

🌀 Tom’s Take:

KPMG’s acquisition of LlamaZOO signals enterprise momentum toward spatial computing. Digital twins are becoming valuable assets, adding a layer of spatial intelligence that supports everything from data analysis to agentic AI and robotics.


Source: KPMG