Bloom & Wild

Year founded 2013
HQ Location London
Sector Technology
Staff count 55
Capital Raised £7m
Bloom & Wild’s technology focus has helped the company flourish to become a UK “top-rated” flower delivery service, but developing a world-class tech platform can be a thorny process.
www.bloomandwild.com
Technology was at the heart of our growth thesis from the very beginning.

Aron Gelbard

Co-founder & CEO

A blossoming tech business model

Technology and nature may not always appear at first glance to be an obvious pairing, but co-founder and CEO Aron Gelbard has successfully combined the two to revitalise an established industry.

“It struck me that there wasn’t a service for flower gifting that people loved to use,” Gelbard says. “From the beginning we realised the answer had to be innovative technology.”

Bloom & Wild offers next-day delivery flower deliveries in custom boxes that fit through a standard letterbox, processed through its website or app.

Our business may not be curing a disease, but we thought this would be a great way of having a positive impact on people’s lives.
Aron Gelbard, Bloom&Wild


Learning the trade from scratch

Previously a consultant at Bain & Company, Gelbard set up Bloom & Wild with no previous experience of the flower industry. He initially rented space at Covent Garden Market in south London, developing relationships with growers and building a vital supply chain.

During the first six-months, Gelbard bootstrapped his floristry venture, funding Bloom & Wild website’s development. Quickly though, he realised the real gap in the market was a mobile app. So he set to work to raise £150,000 of Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme funding.

Developing the app in 2014 helped to accelerate the company’s service offering. In particular its letterbox delivery service, which now accounts for 80-90% of the company’s sales.

“The letterbox delivery lets us really differentiate our offering in the market,” explains Gelbard, “gaining early brand recognition and headway”.


Getting over growing pains

Three years on, Deloitte named Bloom & Wild the ‘second fastest-growing UK tech business’, pipped to the post by Deliveroo. But Gelbard believes the company’s growth journey could have been smoother.

“We underinvested in technology in our early days,” he says. “We thought the technology would be simpler to create than it actually was.”

Gelbard and his co-founder Ben Stanway lacked technical know-how and so overlooked the complexity of creating world-class technology. “This was partly due to cost, but also knowing what to do and how to do it well,” he says.

Had they foreseen this problem, Gelbard believes the company could have got off to a quicker start, being “more responsive to customer feedback in the early stages”. He now regularly discusses the ins and outs of tech with fellow entrepreneurs.


Achieving metrics, reaps investments

Part of the UK’s competitive £2bn cut-flower industry, Gelbard is focusing on maximising his human capital. “We only employ a small amount of staff compared to our competitors,” he says. “But we’ve hired people who genuinely care about our customers and our mission.”

When it comes to its key metrics, the company focuses intently on customer retention, a high net promoter score and repeat-customer rate. Success in these areas has validated their business model in investor circles.

Bloom & Wild has successfully raised £7.25m through Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme and Enterprise Investment Scheme funding and two rounds of venture capital. From a strong capital base, the company has recorded impressive growth, recently expanding into Germany, France and Ireland.

In September 2018, Bloom & Wild raised an additional £15m in a round led by Piper, which included MMC Ventures, Burda Principal Investments and existing angel investors.


Key Metrics

100%+

Turnover increase (2017)

700,000+

Bouquets sold (2017)

Top rated

Uk's online florist

Sources of capital
Government Support
  • Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme
  • Enterprise Investment Scheme

Related Stories

ToucanBox
ToucanBox is among the UK’s fastest-growing education technology businesses thanks to early backing from the co-founders of Innocent Drinks and equity investment from BGF. Read more...
Zilico
Enterprise Investment Scheme investment has helped Zilico reach its commercial goals, a journey which has been hindered by prolonged product development and the global financial crisis. Read more...
e-Quality Learning
Founder and CEO Chris Quickfall says near-bankruptcy was the ultimate “business boot camp”, helping e-Quality Learning to become a “good business, that does good” generating £6m in revenue. Read more...
Verb Brands
Verb Brands’ founder and managing director Chris Donnelly resisted raising capital early on, instead preferring to be cashflow-funded and learning how to run his luxury digital agency along the way. Read more...
Graze
As one of the UK’s leading healthy snack companies, Graze has used a data-driven strategy to successfully expand into the US, boosting its revenue to more than £70m. Read more...
Coffee & TV
Independent visual effects company Coffee & TV puts the magic into ads for brands like Volkswagen and Innocent smoothies, but co-founder and CEO Derek Moore believes the secret to success was to “go it alone” without external funding. Read more...