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Bootstrapped removals startup Muval hits $1 million in revenue in its first 12 months

In just 12 months in business, removal startup Muval has seen revenue of $1 million, all without a single cent from investors.
Muval
Muval co-founders James Morrell and Mahdi Chardi. Source: supplied.

In just 12 months in business, removals startup Muval has seen revenue of $1 million, all without a single cent from investors.

Founded by James Morrell and Mahdi Chardi, Muval is a platform connecting space in removal trucks with the people who need it.

Speaking to StartupSmart, Morrell says the pair came up with the idea after Chardi, who had worked in removals for years, started to become frustrated at inefficiencies in the space.

โ€œTrucks that were travelling interstate often came back empty, and often travelled to their destination with less than 100% utilised capacity,โ€ Morrell says.

โ€œThat was a big waste.โ€

While trucks are driving around with space available, there are customers paying for whole trucks when they only needed, for example, half the space.

โ€œIf we could find a way to improve the efficiency of that system, it represents savings for the customer as well as increased profits for the company.โ€

Morrell and Chardi started working on the startup full time in July last year. Since then, they have serviced more than 1,000 customers, and seen more than $1 million in revenue.

โ€œSeven figures in the first year has far exceeded our expectations,โ€ Morrell says.

โ€œWeโ€™re really, really proud of that.โ€

Once bitten, twice shy

In the early days, the co-founders did consider the possibility of funding. However, this isnโ€™t Morrellโ€™s first rodeo.

Having co-founded another startup before, and having taken VC funding for that startup, he was wary of going down that route again.

โ€œWhen you raise money, you lock yourself into a particular type of growth,โ€ he says.

โ€œYouโ€™ve got investor expectations, and it adds a lot of pressure.โ€

His previous startup โ€œbuilt itself around funding from the get-goโ€, he explains.

The business raised โ€œa few hundred thousandโ€ dollars in seed funding, scored some early wins, and got accepted into a prestigious incubator.

But, it wasnโ€™t to last.

โ€œIn the end, the investor funding dried up, and the business didnโ€™t have the revenue to stand on its own two feet at that time,โ€ Morrell says.

While his previous business partner still works on the project on the side, they both had to find other sources of income, and the company โ€œkind of stalledโ€, he explains.

โ€œThatโ€™s the danger when you build a company around investor funding from day one,โ€ he adds.

โ€œIf it dries up and you havenโ€™t got to a point where youโ€™ve got revenues or profits … then you’re stuck.โ€

Relationships matter

Thatโ€™s not to say, this time, external funding is off the table. Morrell and Chardi have discussed it extensively, and even put together a pitch deck โ€” although they never quite got around to using it.

Ultimately, Morrell says, with Muval, the pair came to a realisation a typical startup approach might not be right for the industry theyโ€™re in.

โ€œWeโ€™re not a startup thatโ€™s come in with a completely new way of moving house, and disrupting an industry,โ€ he says.

โ€œWe still rely on the relationship element, and weโ€™re building strong partnerships with removal operators.โ€

These operators are all too aware of the effect a new tech player can have on an industry. Nobody wants to be โ€˜Uberedโ€™.

โ€œTheyโ€™re very sceptical of a tech player coming in and removing their livelihood,โ€ Morrell says.

โ€œIf we raised a heap of capital and dropped on everyoneโ€™s doorstep with a big splash, we just werenโ€™t going to be very well received.โ€

Bootstrapping has allowed the startup to build on Chardiโ€™s existing relationships in the industry, and to slowly build trust โ€” showing them theyโ€™re there to โ€œhelp them do better businessโ€, rather than to pull the rug out from underneath them, Morrell says.

โ€œWeโ€™ve built features and technology around needs that they have, and slowly taken them on a journey.โ€

Muvalโ€™s impressive revenue proves the startup is solving a problem in the market, Morrell adds. He admits most startups wouldnโ€™t consider $1 million in revenue in their first year slow growth.

โ€œIt wouldnโ€™t be a stretch to say someone with money could come into this industry, sign on hundreds of different moving companies in the first year, and get much bigger revenues โ€ฆ but Iโ€™m not sure how the industry would receive it.โ€

A great position to be in

Morrell says Muval may still consider raising funding in the future, although probably not until next year, after the busy Christmas period.

The co-founders have their eye on a few acquisitions, and are working on partnerships with Aussie software providers in the removals space.

Theyโ€™re looking to grow the startup, โ€œand having some money to do that would be greatโ€, Morrell says.

โ€œItโ€™s a great position to be in.

โ€œRaising when you need the money is the worst thing you can do. Itโ€™s nice to be able to do it on your own terms.โ€

Equally, he suggests investors are less likely to back a startup if it really needs the cash.

โ€œTheyโ€™re pretty savvy โ€ฆ and if they smell desperation, theyโ€™re going to run 100 miles in the other direction.โ€

The best way

In order to bootstrap your business to success, first, itโ€™s important to have core skills in your founding team, Morrell says.

โ€œYou have to have a technical person, or someone who has development capacity โ€ฆ otherwise, youโ€™re just stuck with external costs of development and design,โ€ he says.

โ€œThatโ€™s my contribution.โ€

Chardi has the complementary skill set in sales, and also brings extensive knowledge of the sector, he adds.

Second, he says startups donโ€™t have to have everything automated and ready when they launch.

Founders can get stuck in the idea โ€œeverything needs to be automated and fully tech-enabled from the get-goโ€, Morrell says.

He recommends building what you can at the beginning, โ€œand augmenting what you donโ€™t have with your time and effortโ€.

For example, although Muval has the option of an automated checkout experience, the founders still augment a lot of sales โ€œwith good old-fashioned, over-the-phone customer serviceโ€, he says.

โ€œThatโ€™s something that we will eventually work out โ€ฆ but itโ€™s not something weโ€™ve decided to tackle from day one.โ€

Ultimately, Morrell advises startups to bootstrap, if theyโ€™re able to.

โ€œIt would be great to see more startups going down this route, not necessarily selling so much of their companies upfront, and trying to get some runs on the board,โ€ he says.

โ€œIt can be stressful โ€” I get it,โ€ he adds.

โ€œSome people arenโ€™t in the situation that we were in to start off, and sometimes thereโ€™s nothing you can do but raise investor capital.

โ€œBut if you can do it, itโ€™s the best way in my opinion.โ€

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