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Sydney startup Slyp raises $2 million to bring the humble receipt into the 21st century

Digital receipt startup Slyp, founded by former Paypal and ANZ execs, has raised $2 million in seed funding, to change the way payments are managed later.
Slyp
Slyp co-founders Mike Boyd, Paul Weingarth and Spiro Rokos. Source: Supplied.

Digital receipt startup Slyp has raised $2 million in seed funding, and itโ€™s former Paypal and ANZ exec founders have a vision to change the way payments are managed, after the fact.

Founded in early-2017 by Paul Weingarth, Spiro Rokos and Mike Boyd, the startup allows โ€˜smart receiptsโ€™ to be automatically collected at the point of sale, and delivered to customersโ€™ mobile phones and banking apps.

The investment comes from NAB Ventures and Reinventure, the venture capital arm of Westpac, and Slyp is also working directly with NAB to integrate the technology into the bankโ€™s services.

Weingarth tells StartupSmartย Slyp was born out of โ€œpassion around customer serviceโ€ and, more specifically, frustration when a cashier asked him to take a picture of a paper receipt in order to store it digitally.

The startup ran a trial with NAB at the end of last year, and is gearing up to announce โ€œmajor partnersโ€, Weingarth says, but itโ€™s not quite ready to go to market yet.

โ€œThereโ€™s lots of lovely red tape to get through before we go into production,โ€ he says.

However, once the co-founders started validating the technology, and the willingness of customers, merchants and banks to use it, โ€œwe realised thereโ€™s a lot more we can do with just receiptsโ€, Weingarth says.

Now, Slyp is working on optimising value, allowing users to click through from digital receipts to a merchantโ€™s store, or to re-book a restaurant from the receipt.

โ€œEverybody typically has a mobile banking app on their phone,โ€ he says.

โ€œThereโ€™s a core utility there we can build on and create a new channel for merchants to interact with their customers,โ€ he adds.

A global opportunity

The funding follows a $780,000 angel round completed last year, which Weingarth says covered building the Slyp prototype and expenses.

This latest round is pegged for getting the product ready to launch, and getting it to a bank-grade level.

โ€œThe majority will be [spent] on development and security,โ€ Weingarth says, while some cash will go into business development.

The startup has also been hiring โ€” it’s just brought on board four or five recruits, bringing the team of full-time staff to 12 people.

The plan is to โ€œprogress our product, so we can continue to innovate, scale and distribute over the foreseeable futureโ€, Weingarth adds.

According to Weingarth, the product could conceivably be successful on a global scale, but heโ€™s not looking overseas just yet.

โ€œInitially, we want to prove it in our own backyard,โ€ he says.

The startup has seen interest from global players, and is keeping discussions open, however for the next 12 to 18 months, the focus is on Australia, Weingarth says.

โ€œWe could pick any country in the world to deploy or initiate this tech into,โ€ he says, โ€œwe definitely see this as a global opportunityโ€.

The three Slyp founders combine Weingarthโ€™s experience as head of merchant partnerships at Paypal Australia and Rokosโ€™s experience running Paypalโ€™s technology practice in Australia, with Boydโ€™s banking background at ANZ.

While Paypal helped two of the founders in โ€œlearning the DNA of paymentsโ€, Boyd is the one to help them โ€œnavigate through the context of bankingโ€, Weingarth says.

All three founders had a โ€œrelatively long stintโ€ in corporates, he adds, where โ€œitโ€™s not often you see the vision of an idea and the scale at which you can make an impactโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s an every-person everyday challenge that we can go after. Sometimes you get opportunities that are too good to refuse,โ€ he says.

Bring the product to life

Before going into a capital raise, Weingarth advises startups to โ€œbuild a prototype and get as much validation for that prototype as possibleโ€.

For Slyp, being able to prove and validate the concept โ€œwas really what helped us bring the product to lifeโ€, he says.

โ€œBeing able to demonstrate that to investors is absolutely something you want to do early on.โ€

Equally, however, he advises creating that prototype as quickly and as cheaply as possible, as โ€œyou donโ€™t want to spend your own money on something the market hasnโ€™t validatedโ€.

Slide decks and static presentations are sometimes not enough to get investors interested, Weingarth says.

Prototyping brings the product to life in pitches and can make it easier to relate to, but it also means startups can collect real user feedback.

โ€œGet real-end customer feedback and use that data to drive outcomes,โ€ he advises.

โ€œThen, take that to the investors,โ€ he adds.

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