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Melbourne startup Carbar secures $16.8 million, as IAG acquires majority stake

Vehicle subscription startup Carbar has raised $16.8 million in funding, with Insurance Australia Group acquiring a majority stake of the business.
Carbar
Carbar co-founders Davie Saw, Desmond Hang, Kenneth Teh and Richard Chen. Source: Supplied.

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 heโ€™s 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 Carbarโ€™s 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 โ€œstrategic pivotโ€ that will see an additional focus on the B2B space, โ€œproviding subscription services to employees, or for trade vehiclesโ€, Hang says.

โ€œThatโ€™s a key focus for us for growth.โ€

It may have big plans, but expanding beyond Aussie shores is โ€œnot in the near horizonโ€ for Carbar.

The founders are focusing on building a strong foundation here, first.

โ€œAt least in our home country, weโ€™re the market leader,โ€ Hang explains.

โ€œWith IAG behind us, thatโ€™s 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 โ€œone of the best strategic investors we could haveโ€.

The group isnโ€™t a competitor, involved in trading vehicles or in the vehicle subscription space, but it does sit โ€œadjacent to our industryโ€, he explains.

This could potentially allow the startup to bundle up insurance with its subscription program, Hang adds, โ€œwhich is very good in terms of a complementary serviceโ€.

Hang sees vehicle subscriptions as โ€œthe next stage of a shaft in mobilityโ€, he says, and one that will play a vital role in the automotive industry going forward.

โ€œThatโ€™s where we saw the synergies with a strategic investor like IAG,โ€ the co-founder says.

Carbarโ€™s business model of offering retail and wholesale car sales as well as the subscription option was in line with IAGโ€™s strategy, Hang explains.

โ€œThey understand the mobility space, and how people are consuming mobility options,โ€ he adds.

Equally, the co-founder suggests IAG was won over by Carbarโ€™s ability to bring digital capability to the โ€œpretty 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.

โ€œOur focus on delighting the customers and providing that full end-to-end concierge service really got them across the line.โ€

โ€œSomeone 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 โ€œbeing resilient and being able to trial and test your startupโ€, he says.

โ€œAnd at the same time, really understanding the space youโ€™re 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. Theyโ€™re more likely to find you.

โ€œIf youโ€™re solving a pain point for someone and youโ€™re creating hurt for your competitors, someone will come knocking,โ€ย Hang says.

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