Create a free account, or log in

Apple-sized aspirations: Rockmelon secures $3 million for autism support app

Learning-startup Rockmelon has secured $3 million in funding from an angel investor, to develop its tech to help children with autism and their parents.
Rockmelon
Rockmelon co-founders Stuart Waite, Nicole Rogerson and Alex Andre de la Porte. Source: Supplied.

Learning-platform startup Rockmelon has secured $3 million in funding from an angel investor as it continues to develop its tech to help children with autism and their parents.

The startup offers digital tools to help parents of children with autism, providing visual tools, team management capabilities for therapy, and a library of resources for specialised skill-building.

Rockmelon is designed to address the needs of families who โ€œdo not have access to the basics of helping their child, other than in the form of quite thorough literature, or costly therapyโ€, founder Alex Andre de la Porte tells StartupSmart.

โ€œThereโ€™s not enough supply, in terms of therapy hours, being met, globally,โ€ he adds.

Andre de la Porte founded Rockmelon after his son was diagnosed with autism when heย was seven. With a background in finance and investment, Andre de la Porte brings money-sense and personal experience to the table.

But he had to get people with specialist skills and expertise on board โ€œif we were going to try and have a real crack at solving a real challengeโ€, he says.

Co-founder Stuart Waite is a serial founder Andre de la Porte met through his startup networks, and was also a friend of a friend, who the founder trusted to bring technical skills to the team.

The third co-founder, Nicole Rogerson, is the founder of Autism Awareness Australia, but also someoneย Andre de la Porte knows through parenting networks.

โ€œSheโ€™s a dynamic person who gets things done and is very respected in the community, globally.โ€

The team started โ€œserious workโ€ on the Rockmelon app last year, Andre de la Porte says, and since then theyโ€™ve been working on product development.

The Parent Edition app is already available in the iOS App Store, and the Learning Edition is in progress.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had a lot of really good and constructive feedback,โ€ Andre de la Porte says.

โ€œThe Apple of the autism industryโ€

The $3 million investment will be used to support Rockmelonโ€™s international expansion, Andre de la Porte says, including in several different languages.

โ€œWeโ€™re a global product,โ€ he says.

The startup is also rolling out the platform in partnership with Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, and working with the university on a product to help with sleep pattern behaviour for people with autism.

Finally, Rockmelon is gearing up for what Andre de la Porte calls a โ€œpost-seed raiseโ€, in which it hopes to bring international investors on board to continue development and expansion.

The startupโ€™s development and growth is constantly ongoing, Andre de la Porte says.

Rockmelon may be focused on creating social good, but โ€œweโ€™re a startup at the end of the dayโ€, he adds.

Thereโ€™s a balance to be struck between making a social impact, and being profitable.

โ€œYou want to do good, you want to create positive change, but itโ€™s got to be sustainable to work,โ€ he explains.

Startups often have to be โ€œraw and grungyโ€, he adds, but when youโ€™re solving a serious need for a particular community, โ€œyou want to build the best thing you canโ€.

The service has to be reliable, Andre de la Porte stresses.

โ€œYou donโ€™t want to have a fancy front end, and sticky tape on the back end,โ€ he says.

โ€œThatโ€™s why we raised a lot of money and spent a lot of money. If weโ€™re going to do this it has to work.โ€

The plan is for Rockmelon to become โ€œthe Apple of the autism industryโ€, he says.

For other social enterprise startups, Andre de la Porte advises taking a โ€œlean and agile approach to really identifying the problem, the community, and what youโ€™re there to address, rather than what you feel you want to doโ€.

Itโ€™s a learning experience, he says, and itโ€™s important to get your proof of concept out there to receive โ€œhonest, unbiased feedbackโ€.

He then recommends acting on that feedback, to โ€œreiterate and build really fastโ€.

While founders should keep in mind their initial vision and โ€œwhere the change is neededโ€, they should also be able to react quickly to user feedback, Andre de la Porte says.

NOW READ:ย Untapped potential: Why we need to welcome more adults with autism into the workforce

NOW READ:ย Beyond CSR: Five interesting social enterprise startups joining Impact Academyโ€™s 10th accelerator cohort