Data Direct Acquires Kinsetsu, Supercharging IoT & Location Technology Under Multi-Entrepreneur Keith O’Loughlin
Data Direct, one of Ireland’s longest-standing and most trusted technology providers, has announced the acquisition of the Kinsetsu business. Kinsetsu is a specialist in IoT and location-intelligence solutions. The transaction, completed via Data Direct’s new subsidiary Kiniot Ltd, will see Kinsetsu continue to operate as an independent business—now backed by Data Direct’s scale, supplier ecosystem, and nationwide service capability.
This strategic move is the latest milestone in the growing technology portfolio led by Keith O’Loughlin—multi-entrepreneur, tech innovator, and investor—who recently acquired Data Direct and now adds Kinsetsu to accelerate the company’s expansion into high-growth, sensor-driven and location-aware solutions.
“This is about pairing Data Direct’s forty-plus years of customer trust with Kinsetsu’s category-leading IoT and location tech,” said Keith O’Loughlin, Executive Chairman, Data Direct and Chairman of JKO Capital. “Our customers want real-time, measurable outcomes—fewer risks, faster decisions, tighter compliance, and smarter operations. Kinsetsu gives us that edge today.”
Founded nine years ago, Kinsetsu has built a formidable reputation for delivering transformative IoT outcomes across healthcare, defence, transport, and commercial sectors. Its solutions enable organisations to track assets, monitor environments, automate compliance reporting, and act instantly on risk—without adding workload.
In healthcare, Kinsetsu’s platform helps hospitals and clinics locate critical equipment (such as infusion pumps or defibrillators), reduce loss and rental costs, and ensure devices are available and maintained when and where they’re needed. In temperature-sensitive environments—from hospital pharmacies to food production—Kinsetsu’s sensors continuously monitor fridge and freezer temperature, humidity, and door events, automatically flagging exceptions and notifying teams before thresholds are breached.
With food safety now a board-level priority, Kinsetsu’s cold-chain monitoring delivers early warning on equipment failure—if a fridge in a factory deviates from safe ranges, the system detects it instantly, raises an alert, and guides rapid response. The result: better compliance, reduced product waste, and stronger audit trails with automated reports.
“IoT that simply works—from the sensor to the boardroom—changes how organisations operate,” O’Loughlin added. “Whether it’s a hospital locating life-critical equipment in seconds or a food manufacturer preventing a spoilage event at 2 a.m., these are tangible gains in safety, quality, and cost.”
Beyond sensing, Kinsetsu’s location technology—spanning BLE, RFID, GPS, and related methods—supports indoor and outdoor tracking, workflow optimisation, and safety use-cases (for example, mustering, lone-worker protection, and high-value asset movement). By turning assets, places, and processes into live data, customers gain an operational picture that improves decisions minute by minute.
“Location intelligence isn’t a nice-to-have—it’s foundational,” said O’Loughlin. “From tracking sterile equipment to ensuring people are safe on large sites, location data closes the gap between what’s happening and what needs to happen next.”
The transaction was supported and managed by Daniel McKeown from Strangford Capital, who will also serve as a director in the new business to support its future growth.
The acquisition does not affect Kinsetsu’s current operations, customers, or staff. The existing management team will continue to lead the business, now supported by Data Direct’s procurement power, coordination, and nationwide support services. Customers can expect faster deployment options, integrated support, and a broader menu of solutions that extend from sensors and networks to analytics, security, and lifecycle services.
For more see www.kinsetsu.co.uk







