Skip to main content

Shipamax scores $7M Series A to digitise the logistics back-office

Shipamax, the London-based startup and YC graduate that is helping freight forwarders and other logistics companies automate their back-office processes, has raised $7 million.

Leading the round is Mosaic Ventures, with participation from Crane Venture Partners, Y Combinator, and other existing investors. Shipamax says it will use the funding to double in size over the months ahead, investing both in engineering development and “customer success”.

Founded in 2016, Shipamax first set out to build an online broker for bulk shipping, before pivoting to a SaaS offering for bulk shippers. However, realising that the need for digitisation was real but that the market wasn’t large enough for a “VC scale business,” the startup pivoted one more time to develop a toolkit for back-office “process automation” for the global logistics industry.

“We’d got some traction selling the SaaS solution, but saw the market was not big enough,” Shipamax co-founder Jenna Brown tells me. “We went back to the core of why companies were buying Shipamax and what we delivered for them. It became clear that the underlying data extraction technology we’d built was driving the core value. After speaking to a number of people in adjacent segments of logistics, we saw companies there have the exact same problem – so it was clear we should really narrow the proposition down and widen out the segments we serve to the entire logistics market”.

The core Shipamax technology connects to any email inbox or unstructured data source and automatically extracts data from emails and attachments in real-time. It then outputs a clean, structured feed via the Shipamax API.

The startup says that’s very different to how logistics companies have previously tried to solve the digitisation problem, typically via optical character recognition (OCR) tools such as Abbyy. “The problem with OCR technology is that each company has to start from scratch – setting up hundreds of ‘templates’ to capture important fields and implementing ‘rules’ to interpret this data,” says Shipamax.

By using machine-learning, the company says there is no need to create templates or define rules within each organisation. Instead, Shipamax’s technology provides the “contextual understanding” layer.

Meanwhile, if you are wondering what product-market-fit looks like, once you actually find it, Shipamax says that in its current incarnation it has seen zero customer churn.

The company now processes over 18 million emails and documents per year, and says that performance is tracked by document type — such as orders, bills of lading, supplier invoices etc., with accuracy reaching 99% for the most advanced types.

“We then started to adapt the product for the new market, the large players and strong references from ‘in bulk’ [shipping] gave us credibility with the freight forwarding community to get access to their data to re-train some of the models,” explains Brown.

“Within a few months we’d proven that we could adapt this core tech quickly to the new training sets. A few months after launching this segment, it comprised of over 20% of our revenues and it’s been the fastest growing part of our business. We’re lucky that the core infrastructure we’d built for the initial market was built to handle extremely high volumes, which has made it easy to ramp up with large customers”.



from Startups – TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2RBwFy5

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Axeleo Capital raises $51 million fund

Axeleo Capital has raised a $51 million fund (€45 million). Axeleo first started with an accelerator focused on enterprise startups. The firm is now all grown up with an acceleration program and a full-fledged VC fund. The accelerator is now called Axeleo Scale , while the fund is called Axeleo Capital . And it’s important to mention both parts of the business as they work hand in hand. Axeleo picks up around 10 startups per year and help them reach the Series A stage. If they’re doing well over the 12 to 18 months of the program, Axeleo funds those startups using its VC fund. Limited partners behind the company’s first fund include Bpifrance through the French Tech Accélération program, the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, Vinci Energies, Crédit Agricole, BNP Paribas, Caisse d’Épargne Rhône-Alpes as well as various business angels and family offices. The firm is also partnering with Hi Inov, the holding company of the Dentressangle family. Axeleo will take care of the early stage in...

TikTok’s rivals in India struggle to cash in on its ban

For years, India has served as the largest open battleground for Silicon Valley and Chinese firms searching for their next billion users. With more than 400 million WhatsApp users , India is already the largest market for the Facebook-owned service. The social juggernaut’s big blue app also reaches more than 300 million users in the country. Google is estimated to reach just as many users in India, with YouTube closely rivaling WhatsApp for the most popular smartphone app in the country. Several major giants from China, like Alibaba and Tencent (which a decade ago shut doors for most foreign firms), also count India as their largest overseas market. At its peak, Alibaba’s UC Web gave Google’s Chrome a run for its money. And then there is TikTok, which also identified India as its biggest market outside of China . Though the aggressive arrival of foreign firms in India helped accelerate the growth of the local ecosystem, their capital and expertise also created a level of competit...