Startup World

Lily AI, a startup focused on using deep learning to help brands better convert customers through emotionally tailored recommendations, announced this morning that it has raised a $12.5 million Series A led by Canaan Partners.
Prior investors NEA, Unshackledand Fernbrook Capital also took part in the funding event.Prior to its Series A, Lily had raised just a few million, according to Crunchbase data.The round caught our eye for a few reasons.
First, the investor leading the round Maha Ibrahim also led The RealRealsSeries A.
That company, which also sports a focus on the sartorial, went public in 2019.
(Ibrahim has also dropped by A Technology News Room from time to time, including here.) To see the investor lead an early round in a company operating in a related space was notable.And the technology that co-founders Purva Gupta (formerly Eko India and UNICEF) Sowmiya Chocka Narayanan (formerly of Box) have built is neat.
A Technology News Room first covered Lily back in 2017 when it raised $2 million from NEA.
At the time it had an iOS application, along with a web app and API designed to help retailers better understand a womans personal preferences around fashion in their own catalogs and digital storefronts.In a phone call with A Technology News Room, Gupta said that she and Narayanan decided that from a business model perspective their technology was better for an enterprise product.
The iOS app was eventually deprioritized (in less than a year after launch according to the CEO), with the company making a formal move to focus on enterprise offerings in early 2018.So what does Lily AI do and what is it selling to large retailers? An e-commerce power-up.How it worksLilys founding hypothesis came from Guptas time exploring fashion in New York, asking hundreds of women about what they had bought recently (more on the companys founding story here).
What came out of that exercise was the idea that every customer is roaming around with [their own] emotional context, how they think about their body and how they react to different types of details and items.
The CEO thought that if you could get that context into an online shop, it would probably help consumers find what they want, and help the store sell more at the same time.
Thats the hypothesis behind Lily AI, according to Gupta, who wants to know the individual emotional context of each customer when they shop online.Its that idea that helped the company raise $12.5 million in its A, more capital by far than it had raised before in total.The service works in three steps, starting with tech that can pull out myriad more attributes from items in a catalog; the more variables you have the more you can know about any particular product.
Gupta told A Technology News Room in an email that her companys approach captures significantly more detail on each product based on the traits customers look for when buying apparel, including style, fit, occasion and the like.Then, Lily uses hashed customer data that brands already collect, married to its item attribute data to create a high-confidence prediction of each customers affinity to every attribute of every product in the catalog, she continued.
From there its a recommendation game.The result of all this work is that 100 percent of Lilys customers have seen a step gain in metrics, not just incremental improvements, according to Gupta.
(The companys website claims a 10x ROI on customer spend on its products.)Lily charges for its service on a volume basis.And there should be lots of that.
According to Canaans Ibrahim, e-commerce will continue to grow between 15-20% annually and will represent ~20% of all retail spending in 2020 [] off of an enormous absolute number base of ~$4T of e-commerce spend.
That means Lily has a pretty big market to grow into, which is just what venture investors love to see.One final thing.
During our call, I asked Gupta about privacy.
After all, her company is pairing consumer preferences with other information for the benefit of a brand.
In our discussion about how her startup protects customer privacy, she said something interesting that I asked her to expand on.
Heres how she described how her firm is built around understanding the feelings of others, or whats better known as empathy:We started Lily AI with the goal of helping customers look and feel their best.
And Im so proud that we use Empathy as the guiding principle for everything: building products, hiring, retaining talent and establishing company culture.Not a bad place to build from.Update: Post updated to reflect that Canaan led The RealReals Series A, not C.





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