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Why fintech Joust chose acquisition over VC funding in bid to fuel global growth

After an unsuccessful equity crowdfunding raise, home-loan fintech Joust has been acquired, in a bid to realise its growth ambitions.
Joust
Joust co-founders Greg Abel, Mark Bevan and Richard Hockney. Source: Supplied.

After an unsuccessful equity crowdfunding raise last year, home-loan fintech Joust has been acquired by property startup HouseandLand.com.au, in a bid to realise its growth ambitions.

Founded in June 2016 by managing director Mark Bevan and co-founders Richard Hockney and Greg Abel, Joust is a home-loan auction app, allowing consumers to pitch loan providers against each other to provide the best low-interest rate deal.

The startup has raised about $1.8 million in angel investment to date. Last year, the startup embarked on an equity crowdfunding campaign, but โ€œcame up short of our minimum targetโ€, Bevan told StartupSmart.

Joust has been looking for investment for the past 12 months, but Bevan was never keen to go down the VC route, he says.

โ€œWeโ€™ve always had a preference for a strategic partner,โ€ he says.

โ€œVC funds have not been the ideal fit for us.โ€

HouseandLand is a platform matching plots of land for sale with designs for homes, from local builders, that fit the dimensions.

Under the agreement, HouseandLand has acquired a 70% stake in the Adelaide fintech, but the value of the acquisition has not been disclosed.

Bevan says merging home-loan and property startups is a good strategic match.

HouseandLand has a strong content strategy, he says, which โ€œhas capacity to attract a lot of eyeballsโ€ to the Joust product.

โ€œThereโ€™s the possibility of that providing us with a steady stream of free leans and traffic and volume, which has always been our challenge,โ€ he says.

Once customers are in the door, Joust has a good track record of converting interest into business, Bevan says. But the startup has struggled to secure that traffic in the first place.

โ€œLike a lot of startups, our cost of acquisition of customers can be very high,โ€ Bevan says.

โ€œAnything that reduces that is of huge benefit to us,โ€ he adds.

Global ambitions

Over the next 12 months, as part of the HouseandLand family, Joust will first focus on integrating the two technologies and โ€œgetting that perfectedโ€, before embarking on a marketing strategy to drive new traffic to both startups.

โ€œThe model is proven,โ€ he says.

โ€œIt will give us the opportunity to demonstrate the validity of the business model and proposition.โ€

โ€œOnce weโ€™ve got that story and can demonstrate that scalability, we anticipate attracting a lot of attention,โ€ he adds.

Bevan also has his sights set on taking Joust abroad.

โ€œThe HomeandLand team are very excited about the prospects of scaling rapidly and overseas markets,โ€ Bevan says.

The Joust team has looked into the New Zealand and UK markets, and HomeandLand has existing connections in the US, he says.

โ€œI would expect the US market is potentially likely to be our first target,โ€ he adds.

False starts and mistakes

For startups looking to build connections for growth, Bevan says it’s difficult to give advice, because every business is different.

โ€œThe startup journey is full of bumps in the road and challenges and false starts and mistakes,โ€ he says.

โ€œEvery startup journey is slightly different, and there will be a bit of bad luck along the way, and in our case in recent times a bit of good luck.โ€

Joust has been fortunate in that the founders have been able to utilise its shareholdersโ€™ connections to generate discussions. Thatโ€™s how the relationship with HouseandLand came about.

โ€œBut not everyone has necessarily got the same network of connections,โ€ Bevan says.

However, to an extent, he advises founders try to build their networks as much as possible.

โ€œThat personal network has proven more fruitful than pitching to VCs. Weโ€™ve been looking to raise funds for 12 months, and itโ€™s a very difficult task.โ€

Having a network is โ€œundeniably valuable โ€ฆ but whether it guarantees success is really difficult to sayโ€, he adds.

โ€œI would like to say thereโ€™s a correlation between effort and hard work and networking and all those things to result, but Iโ€™m not sure I could put my hand on my heart and say thatโ€™s definitely the case.โ€

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