Vehicle subscription startup Carbar has raised $16.8 million in funding, with Insurance Australia Group (IAG) acquiring a majority stake of the business.
Founded in 2016, Carbar was initially a vehicle marketplace, but expanded to include a try-before-you-buy model, and then launched its subscription model Carbar+, allowing drivers to hire motors on a month-by-month basis.
The startup raised $5.75 million in equity and debt funding in August last year. That funding was pegged for further testing in the subscription space, Carbar co-founder and chief Desmond Hang tells StartupSmart.
Since then, the team has grown its subscriber numbers and expanded into Sydney, he adds, although heโs tight-lipped about the startup’s revenue growth.
Insurance giant IAG has now acquired a majority stake in the business, participating in this latest round alongside other investors, who have not been named.
The funding will be used to further expand Carbarโs footprint in Australia. The startup is gearing up for national expansion over the course of the next year or two, Hang says.
However, it is also looking at a โstrategic pivotโ that will see an additional focus on the B2B space, โproviding subscription services to employees, or for trade vehiclesโ, Hang says.
โThatโs a key focus for us for growth.โ
It may have big plans, but expanding beyond Aussie shores is โnot in the near horizonโ for Carbar.
The founders are focusing on building a strong foundation here, first.
โAt least in our home country, weโre the market leader,โ Hang explains.
โWith IAG behind us, thatโs a very credible brand that we can leverage off.โ
Strategic partnership
In this funding round, Carbar was looking for synergy with a strategic investor, Hang says. And IAG is โone of the best strategic investors we could haveโ.
The group isnโt a competitor, involved in trading vehicles or in the vehicle subscription space, but it does sit โadjacent to our industryโ, he explains.
This could potentially allow the startup to bundle up insurance with its subscription program, Hang adds, โwhich is very good in terms of a complementary serviceโ.
Hang sees vehicle subscriptions as โthe next stage of a shaft in mobilityโ, he says, and one that will play a vital role in the automotive industry going forward.
โThatโs where we saw the synergies with a strategic investor like IAG,โ the co-founder says.
Carbarโs business model of offering retail and wholesale car sales as well as the subscription option was in line with IAGโs strategy, Hang explains.
โThey understand the mobility space, and how people are consuming mobility options,โ he adds.
Equally, the co-founder suggests IAG was won over by Carbarโs ability to bring digital capability to the โpretty traditionalโ automotive industry.
But, he also says the startup stands out because of its focus on customer service, and that was part of what attracted the main investor.
โOur focus on delighting the customers and providing that full end-to-end concierge service really got them across the line.โ
โSomeone will come knockingโ
While Hang was looking to secure a strategic investor, he advises other founders not to focus on that outcome as a particular goal.
The startup journey is more about โbeing resilient and being able to trial and test your startupโ, he says.
โAnd at the same time, really understanding the space youโre in and understanding and addressing the pain points of consumers.โ
If you create a good business that is getting some traction among customers, you may not have to seek out a strategic investor. Theyโre more likely to find you.
โIf youโre solving a pain point for someone and youโre creating hurt for your competitors, someone will come knocking,โย Hang says.
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