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Melbourne startup Nura raises $6 million to take its custom headphones to the world

A Melbourne-founded startup that builds headphones that customise sound for each listener has raised $6 million from major investors to bring its product to market. The raise comes after Nura completed one of the biggest Australian Kickstarter campaigns in 2016, raising $US1.8 million ($2.3 million) from more than 7000 backers around the world. Nuraphones are […]
Dinushi Dias
Dinushi Dias

A Melbourne-founded startup that builds headphones that customise sound for each listener has raised $6 million from major investors to bring its product to market.

The raise comes after Nura completed one of the biggest Australian Kickstarter campaigns in 2016, raising $US1.8 million ($2.3 million) from more than 7000 backers around the world.

Nuraphones are billed as a โ€œworld-firstโ€ innovation that could transform how people listen to music. The productโ€™sย inbuilt microphones listen to human ears and automatically adjust sound to suit each userโ€™s hearing.

The $6 million investment will enable the startup to distribute these headphones on-demand around the world in its โ€œpost-Kickstarterโ€ phase, Nura co-founder Dragan Petrovic tells StartupSmart from California.

โ€œThe additional money is really to help us accelerate our growth, help us get the word out even more and also to ramp up productions,โ€ he says.

โ€œWe started global and thereโ€™s no going back.โ€

Investors in Nura include Sydney-based Blackbird Ventures, former Google Access chief executive Craig Barratt, and music industry veterans Ric Salmon and Brian Message from UK-based ATC Management, which represents artists like Nick Cave.

โ€œWe have seen Nura grow from three to 12 people in 15 months, build a sophisticated global supply chain, and become Australiaโ€™s biggest Kickstarter campaign,โ€ Blackbird Ventures partner Rick Baker said in a statement.

โ€œThey have a long-term vision and a talented team. We love partnering with founders that have that level of drive and ambition.โ€

Facing tough questions from investors

Petrovic says one of the toughest questions asked by an investor during the funding round related to Nuraโ€™sย go-to-market plan.

With Nura being a tiny company competing with much larger players that have big advertising budgets and celebrity endorsements, the startup was asked: โ€œHow would you be able to get the word out without such a massive advertising budget?โ€

โ€œWe donโ€™t have pockets like that to be able to play the game that way,โ€ says Petrovic.

โ€œWe actually went and showed it to people and talked to them.โ€

During Nuraโ€™s crowdfunding campaign, Petrovic says the team took the nuraphones to music festivals to give music lovers a feel for the product.

They soon found backers were coming from the areas where they had run demos and so Petrovic and his team are confident theyโ€™ll be able to drive brand awareness with strategic โ€œword-of-mouthโ€ marketing and a โ€œfostered grassroots effortโ€.

โ€œThe difference with [our] technology and how you can perceive the sound with and without it was so great [that] what we found is word started to spread quickly,โ€ he says.

This article was first published by StartupSmart.

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