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Melbourne startup wins $20,000 for app putting an end to parking fines

Startup Can-i-park has won the Melbourne Knowledge Week Open Innovation Challenge 2019, scoring $20,000 to develop its technology de-coding parking signs.
Can-i-park
Can-i-park founder Sam Pinner presenting at the Melbourne Knowledge Week Open Innovation Challenge 2019. Source: Supplied.

Melbourne startup Can-i-park has won the Melbourne Knowledge Week Open Innovation Challenge 2019, scoring $20,000 to develop its app using image recognition technology to make sense of parking signs.

Founder Sam Pinner moved to Melbourne from the UK in December 2017, and โ€œgot a parking ticket pretty much straight awayโ€, he tells StartupSmart.

From talking to people and conducting his own research, he found the majority of parking tickets were issued because drivers misunderstood the signs.

He contacted the Melbourne City Council and the on-street compliance service department, and โ€œwe were really lucky in that they’re just super open to hearing about new innovationโ€.

The idea picked up steam from there. Through the app, users take a picture of the parking sign, and the technology works out whether or not they can park there, and for how long.

Pinner himself has no experience in technology development, parking compliance or traffic management.

But, โ€œitโ€™s made it all a bit more excitingโ€, he says.

โ€œI feel like Iโ€™ve been able to look at it all with fresh eyes.โ€

The startup is working with an experienced image recognition specialist in the UK, Pinner explains.

โ€œFrom a technical point of view, we needed to have that skillโ€, he says.

However, when it came to the traffic management and parking compliance piece, โ€œitโ€™s probably more helpful that I havenโ€™t known anything about it, so I can come in and present something a bit disruptiveโ€.

His own lack of experience was never really a concern.

โ€œWe felt the potential of the idea was so strong โ€ฆ that it didnโ€™t matter,โ€ he explains.

โ€œIt sounded like the field of parking compliance needed it.โ€

Ticking all the boxes

The competition sought innovative solutions for improving safety in the city, and while the convenience benefits of Can-i-park are clear, itโ€™s perhaps not quite as obvious how the app improves safety on the roads.

However, when Pinner himself got the parking ticket that sparked the whole thing, it was for parking on a clearway, he says.

โ€œI was genuinely quite shocked at the effect on the traffic.โ€

Cars were trying to merge dangerously into one lane, and cyclists were also having to swerve into the traffic, he says.

โ€œI felt guilty at how much it screwed up the traffic,โ€ he adds.

The app was originally designed to help people feel more confident as theyโ€™re parking, but thereโ€™s a safety aspect to it โ€œthat weโ€™ve been able to explore much more deeplyโ€.

Now, the startup is in a place where, to move forward, it needs money, mentoring and contacts in more councils and states.

โ€œWinning that competition ticks all three boxes for us,โ€ he says.

As well as the top cash prize of $20,000, Can-i-park won placements at the Melbourne Accelerator Programโ€™s early-stage incubator Velocity, and at CQ Universityโ€™s three-day residential Social Innovation Workshop in Gladstone, Queensland.

And for Pinner, the contacts made through the competition are pretty valuable too.

โ€œAt least half of the value comes from the fact weโ€™ve now been presented as an idea to the right people,โ€ he says.

With those elements together, he hopes โ€œwe can get to market without that huge step of seeking investmentโ€.

Pinner is hoping to launch the app in the next four months or so, he says, although this is a tentative timeline, and Pinner hasnโ€™t completely dismissed the possibility of a raise.

โ€œIf thereโ€™s a requirement to raise investment it might take a bit longer,โ€ he says.

The plan is to work with councils across Victoria and the country, and to engage with mentors and marketing specialists โ€œwho can help us make sure uptake is quickโ€.

He also has plans to launch in Brisbane and Sydney, where he says signage is even worse.

Work backwards

When it comes to pitching, either in a pitching competition or to investors, he advises other startups to โ€œwork backwardsโ€.

โ€œWrite a list of what you want the people listening to the pitch to walk away thinking, or what they will be judging you on,โ€ he says.

Pinner recalls a piece of advice from a VC investor, who said all they wanted to know from a pitch was whether the idea is big, whether itโ€™s disruptive, and whether itโ€™s protectable.

โ€œIf you want someone to walk away thinking itโ€™s big, itโ€™s disruptive and itโ€™s protectable, write those three things down first, and build your presentation up from the ground from there,โ€ Pinner says.

The Open Innovation competition had five main judging criteria. The startups were judged on innovation, potential impact, feasibility and scalability, as well as on whether they were technologically and conceptually sound.

โ€œThe entire presentation came backwards from that conclusion,โ€ Pinner says.

Have the end result in mind โ€œwith every slide and every work and every stupid shaped box you paste into Powerpointโ€, he advises.

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