Itโs seen its customer-base increase tenfold over the past 18 months, but mail-order wine startup The Wine Gallery has now closed a $2 million capital raise to improve its tailored wine solution and to fuel further growth.
Launched in 2015 by co-founders Tom Walenkamp and sommelier Banjo Harris Plane, The Wine Gallery brought its tech-focused co-founder Humberto Moreira on board in April the next year.
The startup provides a personalised wine recommendation service, using a palate quiz, rating system and personal customer reviews to tailor wine deliveries to particular palates.
The $2 million raise is led by Conrad Yiu, co-founder of online retailer Temple and Webster, and also includes James Wakefield and Robin McGowan, co-founders of custom suits startup InStitchu, as well as some former employees of Australian wine giant Accolade Wines.
The Wine Gallery has also secured continuing support from investors who participated in its $500,000 seed round April 2017.
Since the seed raise, The Wine Gallery has increased its range of wines and invested in making the platform more user-friendly.
It’s also increased its user base to reach more than 10,000 paying customers and 4,000 monthly subscribers,ย Walenkamp tells StartupSmart.
Having started with just the three co-founders โpacking a lot of boxes ourselvesโ, the startup has stayed pretty lean, he adds, with a team of 10 people now on board.
Sharing is caring
The growth in The Wine Galleryโs has come from โdoubling down on customer experienceโ, Walenkamp says.
And a big part of that customer experience is in social media interaction. The majority of the startupโs customers are generated through word-of-monthย โ or at least, through recommendations via social media.
โInstagram is by far the most influential social media platform for us,โ he says.
The startup has more than 31,000 followers on the platform, and Walenkamp, who still manages the platform for the business, re-shares around five Instagram stories each day from customers โraving about the product experienceโ.
Itโs not everything, but social media plays a big role in marketing to The Wine Galleryโs key demographic of 25- to 45-year-olds, Walenkamp says.
The startup strives to be an โapproachable, fun, interactive, non-snobby wine business,โ he says.
โWeโre able to build a two-way dialogue with our customer base,โ he adds.
This is especially important for The Wine Galleryโs subscription model, allowing the startup to work on โunderstanding [the customerโs] taste, listening to feedback, and using that to make better recommendations for themโ, Walenkamp says.
People want a personally tailored service, and always have, but โpreviously it was reserved for the eliteโ, he adds.
The opportunity ahead
The latest funding is pegged to propel The Wine Gallery to the next level.
โWe see the opportunity in front of us,โ Walenkamp says.
โWeโve already built the best retail wine customer experience in the worldย โ I see no reason why we canโt make it even better.โ
The founders will be continuing to invest further in the startup’s range of wines, with plans to triple the tipples available, including more from overseas. The business is also moving to a new warehouse thatโs seven times the size of its current space.
The startup will also invest in building its development team to continue improving the product and to โmake the recommendation engine even stronger,โ Walenkamp says.
These are changes that will be rolled out over the next 12 months or so, but the startup views its new funding as a means to accelerate growth, he adds.
โThe biggest thing is not to need it. In the Australian market, especially for a consumer-based business, you canโt rely on external capital.โ.
Any startup dealing with physical goods โhas to be sound, surviving on its own, and raising capital to accelerate the journey rather than relying on itโ, he adds.
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