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Identity verification startup Everproof closes $1.5 million seed round, starts planning for Silicon Valley-backed Series A

Australian digital identity verification startup Everproof has completed a $1.5 million seed funding round.
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell
Everproof

After completing a $1.5 million seed round, the founder of digital identity verification startup Everproof has warned founders and chief executives they should be ready to put their day-to-day involvement in their startup entirely on hold during a capital raise process.

Everproof chief executive Nathan Merzvinskis tells StartupSmartย the fundraising process for his company’s seed round got underway in October last year but took a lot of energy from both him and his team.

โ€œYouโ€™ve really got to have you team behind you because if you do lose steam you can burn out and fail to capitalise on any of your early momentum,โ€ he says.

โ€œBe ready to put your interaction with the company on hold, and put provisions in place so it can continue to grow even with the chief executive out of the picture.โ€

Everproof was founded in 2016 after Merzvinskis and fellow co-founders Hugh Krantz and Andreas Limberopoulos had the idea while at uni together, each working in jobs that required various accreditations and licenses.

โ€œThese were only ever issued as hard copies, and they kept getting lost, which I saw as creating friction points and unnecessary risk exposure for companies,โ€ Merzvinskis says.

The three founders decided to build a digital solution for employees to enter in their accreditations, which then created a continuous profile for those employees to share with employers.

Originally focused on things like Working with Children checks, of which Everproof processes around 15,000 each week, and partnerships with organisations like Cricket Australia, the startup is now setting its sights on the financial services sector off the back of its recent capital raise.

Everproof’s $1.5 million seed round was led by Westpac-backed Australian venture capital firm Reinventure and contributed to by APAC region investment company Allectus Capital.

This is the first raise Everproof has completed from established investors, having previously completed a $100,000 โ€œfriends and familyโ€ pre-seed at the start of last year. Reinventure partner Kara Frederick said in a statement the firm is โ€œparticularly excitedโ€ about its investment in Everproof due to the strong founding team and the startup’s potential to address what Reinventure sees as a multibillion-dollar market opportunity.

US rollout and investment on the cards

Everproof now has its sights set on global markets, including the US, asย Merzvinskis says the startupโ€™s platform isnโ€™t restricted by geographical locations. He believes the USโ€™s vast databases of searchable licenses makes it a good fit.

He also believes the governmentโ€™s recent review into open banking and recommendations made on the publicity of customer data shows a willingness from banks and regulators to collaborate to make a safer industryย โ€” something heโ€™s hoping Everproof can get involved in.

โ€œWeโ€™re using this funding to grow our team and product offering, and our users have given us some great ideas for new features which weโ€™re keen to implement,โ€ he says.

โ€œAt the end of 2018, Iโ€™d anticipate weโ€™ll be rolling out in the US.โ€

Merzvinskis is also optimistic about the scale of Everproofโ€™s future, with the company well placed in one of the fastest growing sectors in tech at the moment, he says.

โ€œWe have the opportunity to become the ubiquitous company globally for verified employee information,โ€ he says.

While the company admits to having experienced some growing pains recently, Merzvinskis believes theyโ€™ve all been positive, saying something heโ€™s learned across his founding journey is that startups โ€œgo much faster than you anticipate at timesโ€.

The company successfully went through Blackbird Ventureโ€™s Startmate accelerator, which provided it with strong guidance from mentors and key advice on how to scale the company comfortably. The accelerator also provided the team with access to venture capitalists and completing the program at the end of last year allowed Everproof to go through the capital raising process during the quieter summer months, which Merzvinskis says he was grateful for.

Part of Merzvinskisโ€™ recent five-week trip around Silicon Valley has been to talk to a number of US-based venture capital firms, and he says he foresees Everproof undertaking a Series A round backed by US VCs in 18-24 months.

NOW READ:ย Financial management startup Finch raises $2.25 million in โ€œSilicon Valley-sizedโ€ seed funding round