Musely secures $360M from General Catalyst without giving up equity
The company specializes in compounded treatments for skin, hair, and menopause care. Musely co-founder and CEO Jack Jia told TechCrunch that when CVF investors reached out to him last year, he wasn’t looking to raise capital.
Jia didn’t want to reduce his ownership in the company by selling off a chunk of it to VCs. They frequently approached him about a potential round and he consistently turned them down, he said.
Instead, CVF’s alternative financing is similar to a tiny revenue-share agreement: Companies with predictable revenue streams borrow capital, and then repay the funds along with a fixed, capped percentage of revenue it generates from the use of General Catalyst’s fund.
“When I mathematically modeled it, I found this absolutely compelling,” he said.
While Musely has been growing its revenue on average 50% year-over-year and has served over 1.
2 million patients, acquiring new customers for DTC brands like Musely can be very costly, Jia explained. “When you become a billion-dollar revenue company, you need another billion in order to grow to the next billion,” he said.
“That’s why most of the DTC companies, if you look at the capital burn, it is huge.
” The funding from CVF solves this problem, providing Musely with a capital war chest to support its customer growth.
The funding will support sales, marketing, and other customer acquisition efforts.
Musely joins a CVF portfolio that includes Grammarly, Lemonade, and Ro.
Unlike many of its peers, Musely has been remarkably capital-efficient.
Musely allows patients to access prescription products through asynchronous consultations with board-certified dermatologists and OB-GYNs
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