Local services marketplace Oneflare has secured an additional $1 million in funding as the service begins preparations for international expansion.
It comes after a group of three principal investors, Les Szekely of Equity Venture Partners, Garry Visontay of the Sydney Seed Fund and Dr Jeffrey Tobias of The Strategy Group, invested $500,000 into the online marketplace in May of last year.
Founder Marcus Lim told Private Media that since then Oneflare has seen rapid growth as consumers looking for local services increasingly turn away from traditional print classifieds.
“We’ve grown 300% over the past 12 months, as people leave print classifieds behind as they become obsolete. We add a lot of value for customers and unlike print classifieds we provide a clear return on investment for businesses,” Lim says.
“We’re a marketplace for local services, such as cleaners, electricians, plumbers, removalists, painters, accountants and gardeners. A consumer visits our site with a job that needs to be done, and then we package that info up and send it to local service providers.
“The consumer gets several quotes and chooses the most suitable provider for them. Then when the job’s done, the consumer can provide feedback which we pass on to the service provider.
Since launching in 2011, the service has grown to 50,000 businesses registered in over 200 categories with almost 500,000 visitors per month.
Seeing the rapid rate of growth, Lim says Oneflare’s three principal investors have poured an additional $1 million into the business, bringing the total amount raised to $1.5 million.
“The three main things we’re looking at funding is international expansion, hiring more staff and scaling our sales and marketing team,” he says.
In terms of international expansion, Lim expects Oneflare to launch in the UK within the next 12 months.
“We’ve identified the UK as the biggest opportunity for us at the moment. It has a market three times the size of Australia’s, and it’s also similar in terms of language and how trades and services are handled,” he says.
“For the past three-and-a-half years, we’ve refined our user acquisition offering. Past of what we’re looking at is that we can scale across countries. So we’ve set seven KPIs for our UK expansion, and once we’ve hit those, we’ll look at other overseas markets.”
“The US is a crowded marketplace and many of our counterparts are secure in their positions. New Zealand is geographically the closest market to Australia, but online, that’s not really a relevant consideration.
“The UK has two times the market size of Canada, so the highest yield in terms of reward for effort.”
Aside from its international plans, it also wants to grow its share of the local market.
“We had a very lean operation and have been ramping up recently. We’ve had five hires in the past month,” he says.
This article first appeared on StartupSmart.
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