Melbourne-based headphones startup nura has closed a $21 million Series A funding round led by existing investor Blackbird Ventures to develop new products and accelerate the global rollout of its flagship โNuraphoneโ personalised headphones.
Founded in 2015 by Luke Campbell, Dragan Petrovic and Kyle Slater (who has since left the startup), nura tailors its โNuraphoneโ headphones to each listenerโs unique hearing profile, adapting the sound to suit their ears.
Itโs an offering thatโs proven enticing to investors: this Series A round was backed by a range of startup scene heavyweights including Blackbird Ventures, AirTree Ventures, SOS Ventures and Qualgro Investment.
The round was heavily oversubscribed, with the startup raising $6 million more than planned thanks to strong interest from investors.
But the company is no stranger to exceeding funding expectations. In mid-2016, nura raised the highest amount to date for an Australian Kickstarter project, with $US1.8 million ($2.5 million) raised from almost 8,000 backers. The startup had initially aimed to raise $200,000. ย
This Series A round is the second raise the startup has completed in just 18 months, after receiving a cash injection of $6 million from Blackbird Ventures in 2017.
The startup will now be using this fresh funding to further develop the Nuraphone and drive a global sales push. Campbell says this funding will also help nura โget some new products in the pipelineโ but is tight-lipped as to what these will look like.
nuraโs secret to scoring investment
Earlier this year, nura co-founder Luke Campbell expressed bold plans for the 30-strong startup to one day be as big as Bose. After this raise, it seems nura could be onย track to tackling the $5 billion audio behemoth.
So whatโs the secret to nuraโs funding success? Campbell says focusing on finding product-market fit is key.
โWe have very supportive investors…who could see our sales numbers which were also looking very good,โ Brown explains.
โWe were showing that we had excellent product-market fit, which made it easy to get investors on board.โ
โStartup founders should really focus on your product market fit. Youโve got to believe in your product and make it as good as you think it can be.โ
Campbell says maintaining strong relationships with past investors such as Blackbird Ventures has also been instrumental in nuraโs growth.
โInvestors can do a lot more for you than just give you money. You want investors that are going to give you value in lots of other areas, from providing intros to helping you hire talent,โ Campbell says.
Looking to the future, Campbell has his sights set on making a name for nura on the international stage, buoyed by a range of new product offerings.
โNow itโs heads down and executing our plans for growth, global expansion, and getting new products out there.โ ย ย
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