The Next Big Tech Boom? Sexual Wellness

The Next Big Tech Boom? Sexual Wellness

Welcome to Disruption Squared, my LinkedIn newsletter! In each issue, I’ll be going deep on tomorrow’s unicorns: the companies, people and ideas disrupting how we do business. (Not signed up??Subscribe here ?to make sure you don't miss out on the next big thing in tech.)

There’s a new revolution happening in the tech world — one where systemic barriers are being smashed by a simple sponge on a stick.

As an investor with a decades-long track record in tech, I often marvel at the companies I’ve just missed out on. Last year, that feeling was sparked by Frances Tang, an Asian-American founder who created a product so simple, yet so smart that it led me to discover a movement I’d been missing out on.?

Her company, Awkward Essentials, caught my eye after raising $2.3 million in seed funding for a feminine hygiene “dripstick.” The purpose of the product? After-sex cleanup.?

As the company name implies, this isn’t a subject that’s been talked about frequently or openly in the past. Indeed, lingering taboos have long kept the sexual health and wellness industry in the dark and off the radar of mainstream investors. But that’s quickly changing.??

Awkward Essentials is one of dozens of companies on the leading edge of a sextech revolution. An industry once dominated by male vices is being overhauled by women with a holistic focus on sexual health, wellness and pleasure. Tellingly, this boom has the sexual wellness market on pace to hit $45 billion by 2026, with a staggering compounded annual growth rate of nearly 8%.

Here’s why it’s taking off, and why a multi-gendered focus offers so much potential for investment.

An industry held back by men?

For too long, the conversation around sex and technology has been dominated by one theme: vice. And male vice, in particular.

Since the original dot-com boom of the late ‘90s, funding and innovation in this sector has focused squarely on — for lack of a better term — porn. With the passage of time and web 2.0 innovations, static sites gave way to live webcam platforms and creator-centric services like OnlyFans, but the focus and purpose of sextech remained strikingly narrow.???

But sexual health and wellness has always been a universal need, one which transcends gender, racial and class boundaries. Nor does the market start and end with “adult websites.” Sextech can embrace everything from health and education products to platforms for relationships, tools to enhance intimacy and more.?

I saw this tunnel vision first-hand working to develop technology for the first generation of dating sites in the ‘90s. While men were perceived as the primary audience, our tech was being snapped up by sites serving a diversity of other markets —? like women, the LGBTQ community, and people with disabilities. It opened my eyes to the universality of the industry, and the investment opportunities being left on the table.

In hindsight, this kind of oversight is far from surprising considering that, even today, over 97% of venture funding goes towards men . That leads to one-sided R&D that fails to cater to the needs of more than 50% of potential customers.?

Lack of awareness has been complicated by other barriers to the industry’s growth. Sexual wellness was (and still is) considered a no-go for lots of financial institutions, manufacturers and distributors. In some cases, these taboos are reinforced by laws and codes restricting the advertising or funding of these products. Even basic logistics like payment processing have proved difficult , when so many companies won’t touch anything sex-related.

As a result, even forward-looking, in-demand sextech products and platforms have been left to wither on the vine.

A sea change in sexual attitudes

The good news? That dynamic has been slowly, but steadily, shifting. Awkward Essentials is far from the only success story to come out of recent years. We’ve seen growth all across the sector despite the historic and systemic challenges holding the industry back. Lioness, a woman-led company building devices that are much more than vibrators , raised $1.5 million in a pre-seed funding round. There’s Dipsea, an audio erotica app that raised $5.5 million in 2019. There’s Bump’n , a company engineering hands-free products designed for people with disabilities, that is available to some customers through disability insurance.

Why the recent success? On one level the mechanics of funding and building a sextech business have grown easier with crowdfunders coming onboard, and ecommerce giants like Shopify embracing the industry.

There’s also been a marked influence of Gen Z and Millennials on prevailing cultural norms. Millennials have been dubbed the “don’t judge” generation when it comes to sexual preferences, and Gen Z is bigger on diversity and inclusion than any previous generation.

And that was before two years of a global pandemic. Isolation gave rise to a variety of technology that made intimacy easier for people who felt lonely. From erotic apps to rapid advancements in artificial intelligence , people have been finding ways to meet their needs in the absence of human contact. That includes services centered around sexual health, as well.?

Consider this: despite the world being locked down for months at a time, most countries likely saw STIs increase during the pandemic because of the cancellation of routine testing . One of the solutions? Digital services focused on sexual health and counselling.?

For me as an investor, the conversation around sextech and wellness seems poised to come full circle. I’ve seen this happen before. Formerly taboo or off-limits areas — from online dating, to online gambling and even industries like cannabis — have gone from the margins of the internet to mainstream, with enthusiastic backing by investors and massive demand from users.?

Changing attitudes, rising demand, overlooked markets and new technologies have all put the sexual wellness industry at a tipping point. With a shift away from male vice to holistic health and wellness, investing in sextech has gone from something you’d hide in your portfolio, to a smart long-term play in a market with a clear upside.

A version of this article was originally featured in?Newsweek . Keep up with my latest posts by following me here or on?Twitter ?and?Instagram .

Thanks for reading! To get more analysis and insight delivered straight to your inbox,?subscribe here . And to all you innovators out there ... keep disrupting!

Partho Das

Marketing and Business Analytics || Market Research | Business Development || Digital Marketing

1 年

The Insight Partners through the latest research report titled- “?Sexual Wellness Market Statistics and Industry Analysis| 2030” brings to investors, a detailed analysis of the Sexual Wellness market from entrepreneurs’ point of view. Investigation of current market scenarios draws valuable insights for companies. Read More : https://www.theinsightpartners.com/reports/sexual-wellness-market

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了