A Pioneer Behind Shazam's Early Days
Claus Nehmzow, CEO of Binex Singapore, sat down with Philippe Séjalon, interviewer and industry observer, to trace a remarkable journey spanning over 35 years of innovation. Nehmzow was among the first people brought in at Shazam, joining as COO after co-founder Dhiraj Mukherjee invited him as an angel investor around 2000 to 2001. The app, built on a revolutionary audio fingerprinting algorithm invented by Stanford researcher Avery Wang, had to identify songs from noisy, 10-second audio samples across millions of tracks in under 100 milliseconds. Nehmzow helped raise over 5 million pounds in one of the toughest post-dot-com fundraising climates, and led international business development until 2005, forging deals with mobile carriers worldwide at a time when app stores did not yet exist.
Virtual Worlds and Immersive Learning
After Shazam, Nehmzow explored 3D immersive learning environments, inspired by watching his son collaborate with strangers in World of Warcraft. Working first at PA Consulting and later in Hong Kong, he co-developed a 3D avatar school for language learning targeting 10 to 14 year olds, using spatial audio technology years before it became mainstream. He noted that avatars allow learners, especially shy or disadvantaged individuals, to engage more freely, stripping away visual bias and hierarchical barriers to unlock genuine participation and retention.
Virtual Reality Reshaping Corporate Training
Nehmzow brought virtual reality training into the shipping industry, developing immersive programs for seafarers to practice complex teamwork with heavy machinery, with regulatory bodies validating the method. He argued that financial services could also benefit, not for machinery simulation, but for creating richer, multi-dimensional information environments that go far beyond the limitations of a standard video call. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated adoption, turning VR training from a nice-to-have into an operational necessity and enabling spaced repetition learning that dramatically improves retention.
Growing Green Fuels from the Ground Up
Today, Nehmzow channels his innovation drive into biofuels at Binex Singapore. The company cultivates a fast-growing plant called Sago, harvested in just four to five months, to produce bioethanol and utility pellets as replacements for hydrocarbon fuels and coal. Targeting the shipping industry's decarbonization goals ahead of 2030, the approach uses marginal land that does not compete with food production. Nehmzow sees agri-tech tools including low-orbit satellites, IoT sensors, and AI as key to scaling this nature-based solution efficiently and sustainably.
Discover Binex Singapore
Binex Singapore is an early-stage company focused on producing sustainable biofuels and biomass pellets from fast-growing plants, offering a nature-based alternative to fossil fuels for the shipping and energy sectors. By cultivating crops on marginal land and applying modern agri-tech, Binex aims to support the global transition to green energy while minimizing competition with food production. The company targets growing industry demand for low-carbon fuels ahead of the 2030 decarbonization milestones set by international shipping regulators. With roots in innovation across digital and industrial sectors, Binex brings a cross-disciplinary mindset to one of the most urgent environmental challenges of our time. Discover more about Binex Singapore and their mission to redefine green fuel production.











