Melbourne luggage startup July has launched in the US, with early sales wildly exceeding targets among a more vaccinated โ and more mobile โ consumer base.
July was founded in 2018 by Richard Li and Athan Didaskalou, who set out to โreinvent the wheelโ, redesigning lightweight suitcases from the ground up.
But, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, bringing both international and domestic travel restrictions with it, they saw revenues start to dip.
โWe were in a very serious situation,โ Didaskalou tells SmartCompany.
In Australia, 2021 has not brought much in the way of improvements. So the co-founders set their sights on a market where people are on the move again.
According to Our World in Data, just shy of 59% of the US population has had at least one jab, compared to 28% in Australia.
Domestic flights are back up and running stateside, and as consumers re-embrace travel, theyโre also looking for innovative accessories.
โThe response has just been fantastic,โ Didaskalou says.
โItโs just chalk and cheese, after being in lockdown for so long, to go to a market thatโs flying regularly.โ
July has also attracted national press coverage in the US, securing feature in CNN, Fortune, GQ and Vogue.
Since launch day on July 1, the startup has sold more than 1,000 cases in the US, more than ten times their expectations, Li says.
โWe had a very modest forecast,โ he explains.
โThe market has just really opened up our eyes โฆ we couldnโt keep up.โ
And demand is still trending up. In July, 70% of the startupโs revenue came from Australia, and about 30% came from the US.
This month already, more than 50% of revenue has come from the US.
Trial and error
Itโs a huge market, and Julyโs products have clearly resonated.
Competition in this sector is fairly stagnant, globally, Didaskalou explains. The pandemic has also meant that not many new players have entered, while some have dropped out.
โShare of market is pretty much all Samsonite and its subsidiary brands.โ
People are hungry for โfreshnessโ and something new and innovative. The pair also like to think US customers are attracted to the โAussieโ vibe.
July also offers personalisation, with various fonts and colours available, and 14 different languages โ plus emojis, of course.
About 70% of the cases the team is shipping to the US are personalised, Didaskalou explains. And all of that personalisation and shipping work is done from Melbourne.
Thereโs a balance to be struck here between bringing overseas customers into the Aussie experience, and keeping the small business touch, while also tweaking marketing and customer service to cater to a slightly different audience.
Thereโs an element of trial and error, Li explains.
โIf something works in Australia it doesnโt mean itโs going to work in the US.
โWe have to tailor those ads and that messaging and also trying to localise as much as possible.โ
For example, the US website uses US spelling, not Australian. Itโs a small thing, but it helps create the best experience possible for those customers.
If an Aussie saw the word โpersonalizationโ with a โZโ on a local retailerโs website, โyou would instantly feel icky about it,โ Didaskalou adds.
Australia on pause
All of this is positive news for the business, but itโs bittersweet.
This is an Aussie-grown business, and the founders want to be able to continue their growth in their home market.
My conversation with Li and Didaskalou literally began with jokes lamenting lockdowns and the holidays weโve all had to cancel.
Weโre chatting about it lightheartedly, but it is difficult to see this market completely out of action.
โThereโs an emotional, human side to it, where the confidence of travel just isnโt there anymore,โ Didaskalou says.
Itโs not that the Aussie market is no longer a focus, he adds. Rather, itโs on pause. And the US opportunity is too big to pass up.
โThe business in the US is just phenomenal,โ he says.
โThey literally have 15x the population, and the demand for travel is big โฆ Itโs always been in the plan for world domination. I think COVID just sped up the US process.โ
More cash on the cards for July?
Launching in a whole new market when you canโt have boots on the ground would have been unthinkable just a few years ago. Thereโs not necessarily a playbook here.
But Didaskalou says success comes down to โreally good partnersโ and willingness to take a call at any hour of the day or night.
โWeโre working around the clock,โ he says.
Equally, Li notes that the COVID-19 pandemic means that people are much more understanding that face-to-face meetings are off the cards. Deals can be made over Zoom meetings now.
And that goes for both commercial partners and VCs.
The success of the launch in the US has also fast tracked talks of another round of funding. This time, the founders are focusing on US investors.
โWe already have a couple of calls lined up,โ Li says.
โOur goal is, while weโre waiting for Australia to bounce back, weโre going to keep selling in the US, keep shipping to the US and raising capital from US VCs.โ
COVID-19 has โbasically normalisedโ capital raising over virtual calls, he adds. No one is flying to New York for a chat and a coffee anymore.
โIt kind of worked in our favour in a sense.โ
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