Before even writing a line of code, Paul McCarney made sure he had the right partnerships in place to see his startup could grow in the long-run.
McCarney, a non-executive director of iiNet, wanted to build a safe and secure platform to allow company and public data to be exchange and knew the most important thing would be the trust of users.
His startup, Data Republic, launched late last week, and provides a platform with bank-level security to facilitate the exchange of customer data between companies.
To create the right legal and privacy framework around this, McCarney first went to large law firm Allens.
While most founders generally create the technology and then look for the right partners, he says doing this the other way around will help his business in the longer term.
โPartnering with people like Allens in the beginning was very unusual,โ McCarney says.
โItโs unusual to partner with a very high-end law firm before you write a lot of code.
โIt was about being respectful of the amount of integrity required and the amount of trust we need to engender.โ
Being transparent about the process and ensuring users opt in to have their data shared is paramount, McCarney says.
The companies contributing data to the platform have to get full permission from the users beforehand, and get full control over what is actually exchanged. Data Republic uses tokenisation to ensure there is no revealing personal information.
Startups can leverage data
With more startups looking to more directly target users, McCarney says itโs about having a full range of information at their disposal.
โThe main idea is the organisations are increasingly looking for personalised offerings to their customers,โ he says.
โIn order to do that they need to understand what their customers are doing. Theyโre increasingly understanding that they really only have 1% of their customerโs time and 99% of it is spent elsewhere. Companies are looking to get insights externally into what their customers are doing with that time.
โA lot of startups have data at the centre of their engagement or revenue models, and theyโre looking to share that data with other organisations. Thatโs quite a big risk though and they need to understand privacy principles, risks and personal information.
De-risking the process
Although the exchange of customer data already happens regularly, McCarney says this is usually ad-hoc and through various partnerships, with no established framework.
โItโs a very high-risk, high-effort thing to do without this platform,โ he says.
โWe de-risk that with a legal framework. Weโve designed a piece of technology thatโs pretty unique around the world and enables organisations to share in a data privacy compliant, secure and well-governed manner.
โNow theyโre able to leverage our environment in order to gain insights from other data sets or to monetise their data sets in a way that decreases the risk of doing so.โ
Data Republic is housed in Stone & Chalk in Sydney and has received funding from Reinventure.
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