Tuesday, December 18, 2018

The importance of the Relayr exit for IIoT startups, and for startups in Germany


The Industrial IoT (IIoT) startup Relayr recently sold for a reported $300 million. While it is not a unicorn type exit with a billion Euro valuation, it is a very significant exit for a startup in the IIoT space and for a startup based in Germany.




The importance for IIoT

Germany is a great place for an IIoT startup to engage with industrial customers: There are about 2000 so called Hidden Champions in Germany, and most are located in the south of the country. These ‘hidden champions’ are global players, and startups serving these customers should expect to scale globally very quickly.

Relayr has had to develop four basic approaches in order to scale:


1. Make sure that there is a business outcome and the vertical market understands the value proposition


Relayr’s core products is a horizontal solution, a middleware in the cloud which acts a data broker. They started with a horizontal go-to-market approach, but that value proposition turned out to be too complex to communicate, and the customers did not have the  know-how to connect Operational Technology (OT) and IT.

Relayr then focused on use cases in a four specific verticals - manufacturing, energy, transportation, and retail - and developed prepackaged products for each use case and vertical.

The business outcomes of the use cases were either opex minimization or creating new revenue streams. Predictive maintenance is such a business outcome that results in opex minimization.

2. Know your buying center

Selling IIoT requires executive sponsorship, in particular when wanting to change business outcomes. CIOs typically cannot change these outcomes, and Relayr ends up selling to the CEO as the buying center. At the CEO level, they try to position themselves as one of the key providers vis-a-vis competitors such as Cisco and GE.



3. Make sure that your product connects well with the surrounding ecosystem

Industrial environments require high quality systems and the ability to exchange data with others. In addition, most environments are hybrid on premise and cloud deployments, and the product architecture needs to be designed with that in mind.

Relayr offers six prepackaged products with OEM partners based on the Relayr routing gateways. The gateway has an open ecosystem with other vendors for hardware, software, security and connectivity.

4. Have a structured GTM approach with clearly defined deliverables

Relayr receives many leads from partners, but the customer requests tend to be very unspecific. In response, they have built structured and templated roll-out process for their GTM and devised the following ‘5-4-3’ schema:


  • Firstly, a five day discovery session to identify the low hanging fruit impact use cases. This compresses the consulting sales cycle from months to one week.


  • Secondly, a four week prototyping phase


  • Thirdly, a three month roll-out plan. Some of these roll outs were global from day one and required zero touch deployments.

The Relayr business model is to drive services revenues for enablement until SaaS revenues kicks in. The services revenues are a means to an end and cost neutral. The SaaS pricing started by charging per device per year for small projects, but Relayr quickly realized that this pricing metric was unrelated to a business outcome. Their goal is to grow strategically with a customer, and hence churn tends to be low.

The SaaS sales cycle depends on the complexity of the sale. For a single machine the cycle is six months; for others that are more complex up to one year but in both cases, the key is to provide the customer with a clearly defined environment. In addition, they are offering insurance of a business outcome as a unique selling point, e.g. a performance outcome from energy management. Guaranteeing this business outcome helps accelerate the sales cycle.

A complex environment requires sales discipline. Junior sales people did not work out for Relayr. Instead, Relayr went through engagements with consulting companies such as McKinsey , EY, and Accenture to establish credibility. In addition, the open platform for developers provided a sandbox environment which resulted in 50% of projects being industry initiated.

The importance of the exit

Getting to a $300 million valuation in five years is a great outcome by any startup measure. Given where the company revenue generation after five years and given the complexity of the IIoT space, growing into a fully fledged unicorn valuation would have likely been difficult. It would have required taking on more capital - likely from large international investors -, and expanding more aggressively internationally.

Relayr raised $66.8 million in six rounds from the likes of KPCB,  Munich Re, Deutsche Telekom and others. CEO Josef Brunner has stated that they were intentionally looking for US investor early on to push their thinking and for the brand when approaching customers and indeed, KPCB is one of few US VCs who have invested in a European startup early on.

Founders and early stage investors likely had a nice exit, but it was not a fund returning exit for KPCB, and it is unlikely that Deutsche Telekom made a lot of money after their last investment just a few months prior to the sale.

The buyer Munich Re/HBS is an insurance company that is using IIoT to offer risk services. A sign for more IIoT acquisitions to come from competing insurance providers?

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Further reading (in German):