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Meet SpeakSee, the startup that raised over $100,000 in just 10 days for its design-savvy product that improves the lives of deaf people

SpeakSee, a speech-to-text startup to bring deaf and hard-of-hearing people back into conversations, has raised $107,660 in just 10 days.
SpeakSee co-founder and designer Joshua Flowers. Source: Supplied.
SpeakSee co-founder and designer Joshua Flowers. Source: Supplied.

SpeakSee, an Australian-founded speech-to-text startup designed to bring deaf and hard-of-hearing people back into conversations, has raised $107,660 ($US80,000) through crowdfunding in just 10 days.

Sydney-based designer Joshua Flowers tells StartupSmart SpeakSee was inspired by his grandad, who as a โ€œlate-deaf adultโ€ was finding it increasingly difficult to keep up with family conversations.

For people like Flowersโ€™s grandfather, deafness can be a โ€œprofoundly isolating experience and incredibly frustrating,โ€ he says.

The SpeakSee system uses voice-to-text technology, translating words spoken in a group situation to an app on a phone or tablet. Different people in the conversation use different-coloured clip-on mics and the app displays each personโ€™s comments in clearly defined coloured speech bubbles.

The startup launched its crowdfunding campaign on IndieGoGo on June 19 and raised more than $100,000 in its first 10 days, smashing itsย $67,300 ($US50,000) target. At the time of writing, SpeakSeeโ€™s campaign has raised just over $118,000 ($US87,700).

For people who โ€œnormally only hear 20% to 30% of the conversation,โ€ Flowers says the SpeakSee device โ€œincreases comprehension dramaticallyโ€.

It was initially designed for use within a family context but the product โ€œcould also work well in a business context,โ€ says Flowers.

Having started showcasing the product he has seen โ€œlots of interested partiesโ€, he adds.

Thereโ€™s also a focus on the design, with the SpeakSee product intended to be stylish and gadget-like, rather than medical.

The purpose here is to break down the stigma of hearing devices, moving away from flesh-coloured plastic hearing aids, which are โ€œdesigned to be hidden away because theyโ€™re something to be ashamed ofโ€, Flowers says.

โ€œSpeakSee is designed to be fun, friendly and universal,โ€ he says, adding that he wants people โ€œnot to feel embarrassed about using [it]โ€.

โ€œIt looks beautiful and itโ€™s easy to use,โ€ Flowers adds.

SpeakSee
Source: Supplied

A “mission-type company”

The SpeakSee concept was born when Flowers was studying industrial design at the University of New South Wales. He spent a year designing the product and creating a working prototype, but after graduation he landed a job as an industrial designer in Denmark and halted work on SpeakSee.

The product didnโ€™t become a business until 2016, after Flowers was awarded a Young Australian Good Design Innovation Award for the product. He was contacted by various interested investors and collaborators, including Dutch entrepreneurs Jari Hazelebach and Marcel van der Ven, who became his co-founders.

โ€œWe had some initial funding from some private investors, which was enough to get started,โ€ he says.

Hazelebach and van der Ven run the business side of things from the Netherlands and Flowers is the lead designer. Heโ€™s still based in Sydney, โ€œdoing industrial design remotelyโ€.

For Flowers, the crowdfunding campaign is just the beginning. He sees the raise as something of a validation and โ€œthe first stage to getting VC fundingโ€.

The funds raised on IndieGoGo will be channeled directly into production and manufacturing, getting the first product run out to market, Flowers says. Then, later, the team will โ€œdefinitelyโ€ look to raise venture capital.

Flowers calls SpeakSee a โ€œmission-type companyโ€, founded by people who are passionate about making a positive impact on peopleโ€™s lives.

โ€œItโ€™s not a product anyone else would be able to dream up,โ€ Flowers says.

โ€œItโ€™s a very specific use case, but for the people who use it, itโ€™s a godsend.โ€

Working as an industrial designer, Flowers says he designs a lot of products, but โ€œmaking a huge positive impact on someoneโ€™s life is something elseโ€.

In fact, Flowers says he didnโ€™t expect his project to turn into a business at all, let alone to raise more than $100,000 in funding.

โ€œIt was just fantastic to see that people were excited and that they could see that this would help them. Being a niche assisted device, we didnโ€™t expect millions to roll in, but the response was really strong,โ€ he says.

โ€œThis is just the start of our mission, we would like to make other assisted devices in the same vein,โ€ he adds, although he declines to share any more details on what the follow-up devices may be.

For other founders thinking of turning a passion project into a business, โ€œthe most important thing is finding a need, and finding something you can simultaneously get excited aboutโ€, Flowers says.

โ€œSome people find needs but are not passionate about it, some people are passionate but find that no one wants it,โ€ he says.

โ€œFind that mythical middle point between your passion and unfilled need.โ€

NOW READ:ย Why movie ticket startup Choovie is choosing equity crowdfunding in its bid to fill Australiaโ€™s empty cinemas

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