
That’s something that is relatively uncommon, although not unheard of, for such an early-stage company, and is sometimes frowned upon by investors. Laundrapp was founded in 2014 but only saw its official launch at the start of this year.
Today the startup’s advertising coffers get anther boost. The company has raised a further £4 million to be used for “continued rapid expansion” across the UK, and — you’ve guessed it — a “substantial investment” in marketing. In other words, don’t expect those TV ads to disappear any time soon.
Currently available in London, Edinburgh, and Birmingham, Laundrapp competes with a number of Uber-styled on-demand laundry apps.
These include ZipJet, founded by the ruthless Rocket Internet startup factory, along with the likes of Lavanda, Ignite100-accelerated Washbox, and Spyn (now part of Wayra Accelerator)
On how crowded the, albeit nascent, on-demand laundry app market appears to be, Laundrapp co-founder and CEO Ed Relf told me in January:
Actually we don’t believe the market is crowded at all, to the contrary this market is very much in it’s infancy and we see Laundrapp as being the service that will revolutionise the digital on-demand laundry industry. We see our competitor more as the washing machine, we’re trying to encourage an entirely new consumer habit with Laundrapp in the same way as Uber did with on-demand travel, we’re not competing with other laundry services, we’re actually creating an entirely new category, there’s a bigger mission.Meanwhile, Laundrapp’s new funding comes from a group of investors including Michael Spencer, founder of interdealer broker ICAP plc, and Jeff Blue, the former strategic development director at Sports Direct International.