Cocoon

Year founded 2014
HQ Location Leeds
Sector Technology
Staff count 23
Capital Raised £5m+
Hardware and software specialist Cocoon is helping people feel safe in their homes with its surveillance solutions, and its same-name device is generating admissible evidence to combat crime.
cocoon.life
While investor payback for hardware versus software investment may take longer, hardware is a more defensible investment with lower risk and higher chances it will deliver excellent returns.

Sanjay Parekh

Co-founder & Head of commercial

Smart security outwitting criminals

Evidence captured on the tennis ball-sized Cocoon device has already been instrumental in convicting three intruders in the UK. “The assailants were identified from video footage because the device captures clear video, night and day,” explains co-founder and head of commercial Sanjay Parekh.

Cocoon’s security device senses activity in the home with its unique Subsound technology. It then connects with a mobile phone app to inform the user of unusual activity. And it uses machine learning to minimise false alarms.

The device is part of the growing wave of products designed by UK engineers to create smart homes, remotely managing their security, heating and lighting.

 

Long lead time for hardware

The challenge for developers like Cocoon is creating a piece of hardware that can withstand the long lead times when taking it to market, says Parekh.

When Cocoon created its device, the company had to predict customer appetite and demand as much as “18-24 months before the product actually hit the shelf”, he explains. In contrast, software updates are made on an ongoing basis.

To mitigate the time challenges that hardware development creates, Cocoon applies many of the lean principles used in software development. It conducts focused and meaningful testing to gather data. Its prototypes were tested by users whose feedback was incorporated into the design. Another key driving human factor in Cocoon’s success is the UK’s engineering talent.

We’ve been more capital-intensive than a regular software business.

Sanjay Parekh, Cocoon

How to secure investment

Cocoon required sizeable investment to progress through the research and development phase, before moving on to developing a physical product. “We’ve been more capital-intensive than a regular software business,” says Parekh.

Raising investment became more complicated because the payback period for hardware products can be much longer than a pure software product. “VC investors look at software businesses and think they can deploy less capital and get a similar return with a more likely outcome than investing in hardware,” he explains.

However, Cocoon has raised over £5m in funding. After a successful crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo in 2014, the business has since attracted more than £5m of investment from Aviva Ventures and Breed Reply Investments. Breed also supported Cocoon through an equity crowdfunding campaign on Crowdcube.

 

A butterfly hatches

After perfecting its hardware, Cocoon is ramping up marketing to scale up its sales in the UK and in other markets. Furthermore, the company aims to triple its revenue in 2018. And Cocoon has embarked on international sales by entering the “often overlooked” and English-speaking New Zealand market, and plans further expansion throughout 2018.


Key Metrics

72 nations

Product active in

4000+

Units produced (2017)

3+

criminals convicted

Sources of capital

Related Stories

Gousto
Gousto has overcome numerous scale-up challenges thanks to its strong values, people-focused culture and unequivocal commitment to organic growth, confirming its prize as one of the UK’s most innovative food tech companies. Read more...
busuu
Founder and CEO Bernhard Niesner says that having the wrong culture created a “near-death experience” for busuu, but a concerted turnaround has put the mobile language-learning platform at the top of its class for the past few years. Read more...
Kromek
Having raised more than $100m of investment capital over the last 15 years, Kromek’s long-term scale-up journey relies on ample patient capital to fund its life-saving and safety-enhancing radiation detection technologies. Read more...
Talmix
Talmix’s combination of intellectual and human capital is amplified by digital capital, connecting a 40,000-strong network of specialist consultants delivering know-how solutions for a global client base. Read more...
MCCGLC
Relocating from Milan to London’s creative heartland may have been a personal and professional risk for MCCGLC’s founder and CEO Matteo Console Camprini, but the company’s diverse international culture has propelled it to new heights. Read more...
Taylor & Hart
Challenging the “very traditional” jewellery industry culture, Taylor & Hart has cultivated a disruptive brand, using technology capital to create a global-reaching business model. Read more...