Logistics · FlyQ
FlyQ
Drone delivery in Mexico City: same-day express from a local hub, real-time tracking, and door delivery—positioned on the public site as fast, safe flights with an electric fleet and certified operations.
TechNeura functions as a neural network of innovative companies—signals, talent, and momentum flow where they create the most impact. FlyQ is the aerial logistics node: it turns dense urban delivery from a traffic problem into a flight operation—telemetry, hub-to-door routing, and customer-visible tracking—so commerce brands (including GreenWingz in our portfolio narrative) can promise speed without pretending last mile is solved by more vans alone.
Overview
FlyQ (flyq.app) is TechNeura’s Aerial Logistics brand. The English marketing surface describes hub-based drone delivery in CDMX: express same-day service, tracking in real time, and delivery to the customer’s door.
The site organizes demand by vertical—Restaurants, Grocery & Retail, Healthcare, and Real Estate—so operators and buyers can see where aerial delivery is meant to fit, not only as a consumer novelty but as infrastructure for recurring categories.
We treat performance figures and operational claims below as stated on FlyQ’s own marketing pages, not as independent verification.
How it works
FlyQ frames the customer journey in three steps on the public homepage: pick your items, track the flight in real time, and receive the package safely at your door. That sequence matches how a modern logistics product should read—minimal friction, maximum visibility.
Real-time tracking is called out explicitly alongside “delivery to your door,” which matters in urban Mexico City where ETA honesty and status updates reduce support load and abandoned expectations.
The marketing page also highlights a customer story: shoppers describe FlyQ as easy, fast, and reliable—useful social proof for a category where novelty must quickly convert into repeat trust.
Solutions (by segment)
Navigation and copy on the public site highlight four solution areas: Restaurants; Grocery & Retail; Healthcare; and Real Estate. Each implies different SLA, payload, and compliance constraints—exact SKUs and routes belong in operator runbooks; here we note only that FlyQ is positioning the platform across these verticals rather than as a single use-case toy.
Fleet, safety, and performance
FlyQ’s marketing site emphasizes an electric fleet and optimized routes for lower environmental impact, certified operations with real-time monitoring and strict safety protocols, and speed from hub to door.
A headline performance metric appears on the page: an average delivery time of about three minutes and two seconds, alongside messaging that same-day express is available across CDMX. We cite that number as self-reported marketing copy, not a third-party benchmark.
Telemetry and trust
The site describes drones built for reliability and safety, with real-time telemetry, certified pilots, and strict operational limits. That language signals how FlyQ wants customers and regulators to think about risk: bounded operations, monitored flights, human certification in the loop.
Dashboard and booking
Footer and navigation on the public site reference a Dashboard, Book now, and Sign in—i.e. authenticated and operational surfaces beyond the marketing homepage. We do not document internal dashboard screens here; treat those links as the live product entry points for customers and operators.
Role inside TechNeura
FlyQ connects the portfolio vertically: e-commerce and marketplace brands can surface “deliver by air” where regulation and geography allow; gig and service platforms can offload urgent, high-value, or time-definite legs to aerial routes instead of ground-only dispatch.
The design pattern is shared intelligence—orders, ETAs, and exception handling—without implying every TechNeura property is already API-integrated in production. Where partnerships are live, your team can add concrete integration bullets later.
Differentiators
Urban drone delivery positioned for CDMX specifically, with same-day express and hub-to-door narrative rather than generic “logistics AI.”
Real-time tracking as a first-class promise, aligned with how customers judge modern delivery products.
Segmented go-to-market (restaurants, retail, healthcare, real estate) shows intent to sell operations, not one-off demos.
Safety and certification called out explicitly—essential for aerial logistics trust.
What we sourced
This page reflects structure and wording visible on FlyQ’s English marketing site at flyq.app/en (hero, how it works, solutions, fleet/performance, navigation/footer). If the production domain or metrics change, update this content to match.
Sourcing note
- https://flyq.app/en — marketing copy and navigation (accessed for TechNeura brand page)