Dinii, a cloud-based restaurant management platform, raises $45M Series B

Date:

Share post:


Japan has always been a strong market for bringing technology into the experience of consuming food, and now one of the startups leading on this idea is attracting investors from across the ocean. Dinii, which lets diners order food from restaurants and shops through a mobile platform, has raised $48 million (7.46 billion JPY). Bessemer Venture Partners and Hillhouse Investment Management are leading the investment, with Ecelectic and Flight Deck Capital participating. Notably, this is the first time that Bessemer is investing in a startup in Japan.

Mao Yamada (CEO) and Kazuki Otomo (CTO) started Dinii in 2018 while still students at the University of Tokyo, after working part-time in restaurants to put themselves through school and realizing how outdated those restaurants’ order and delivery systems were.

Dinii originally made its mark as a B2B SaaS business: Circumventing the need for would-be restaurant customers — already operating on thin margins — to take on special devices or other equipment, the pair made a foothold in the market with a lower-cost, cloud-based point-of-sale platform that restaurants could use with whatever phones or other devices they already owned. Now Dinii wants to build on its traction by expanding the financial services it provides to its customers, Yamada told TechCrunch.

“Since we already have a cloud-based POS platform, we believe we will be able to expand to many more product services such as employee management, [restaurants] reservation, and [food] deliveries, and more,” he said.

Dinii was inspired by Toast, the cloud-based restaurant management system out of the U.S. that also started with POS and payment services (and also happens to have had Bessemer as an early backer). But Yamada says that he has yet to come across any company in Japan with capabilities (data and financial service for restaurants) similar to Dinii’s.

“Having been fortunate to be a key investor in Toast in the U.S., supporting it to become a $13 billion company, we see a similar element of success in Dinii: a strong team led by a young and visionary leader, a large underserved market, and the best all-in-one cloud-based solution,” Bryan Wu of Bessemer Venture Partners said. “We are confident that Dinii will emerge as one of the most prominent SaaS and fintech leaders in Japan.”

The Tokyo-based startup has a cashless payment solution, Dinii Payments, that it hopes to parlay into a bigger financial services product for its customers. “By first providing the cashless solutions, we can eventually move into back office operations, such as invoice settlement, inventory management, salary payouts,” said Yamada.

Another big focus will be services catering to the kinds of employees who tend to work in the restaurants on Dinii’s platform. A large proportion of them work part-time, Jorel Chan, chief of staff at Dinii, told TechCrunch. “They may be students who don’t really have stable jobs, and have poor credit scores, for example,” he said. “More often than not, they can’t wait until the end of the month to get their salary. They probably want daily payments. But there’s no ability to do that today.” One plan Dinii has is to introduce daily payouts for an additional fee.

Other areas it hopes to break into include insurance, asset management, and loans, to help restaurants manage cash flow and expand their operations.

Restaurant scene in Japan

Most restaurants in Japan mainly use on-site point-of-sale systems. In other words, traditional restaurants work with companies like Toshiba or NEC to rent an on-site POS system for basic operations. These can be costly and limited in their functionality and are not really set up for modern demands such as ordering from mobile apps, paying by QR codes, cashless payments, and cloud-based customer-relationship-management tools, Yamada said.

By putting the POS system on the cloud, Dinii’s customers — restaurants ranging from SMBs to large enterprises — can offer instant capabilities and gather customer data through mobile ordering. Dinii’s technology helps restaurant owners understand which menu items are popular and enables them to communicate with customers through a CRM (customer relationship management) system, send customized coupons to their consumers, and eventually increase revenues,” Yamada explained.

Dinii also leverages an integration with Line, the popular messaging app, which allows local restaurants to collect customer data such as favorite menu items, gender, last visit, and the number of visits.

The Japanese startup monetizes in two ways: by charging software subscription fees for its cloud-based POS system and fees for payments made through the cashless platform integrated into the POS system.

More than 900,000 restaurants are in Japan, and the food service market in the country is projected to increase to roughly $475 billion by 2030, up from $214.35 million in 2022. Dinii currently has around 3,000 restaurants across Japan, which is barely 0.5% penetration, so it has huge upside potential for this, Yamada noted.

“With more than 20 million [registered] users making food orders across over 3,000 restaurants, you can imagine how much traffic volume of data passes through Dinii’s platform every single second. Without revealing too much, we are currently building up capabilities for proprietary data solutions for restaurants that would help them in the future,” Yamada continued.  

Expansion to Southeast Asia

The Tokyo startup also has operations in Osaka — covering the country’s two biggest markets for restaurants. But with the new capital, it plans to expand to other Japanese cities like Nagoya and to countries across Southeast Asia such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand. Dinii’s workforce has quadrupled from 30 employees in 2022 to 130, and it will also be hiring more as it grow geographically.

The startup has raised 8 billion JPY, equivalent to about $55 million, since its inception. Its previous investors include ANRI and Coral Capital.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Starlink hits 4 million subscribers

SpaceX’s Starlink satellite internet network is expected to hit a new customer milestone this week, company President...

Runway earmarks $5M to fund up to 100 films using AI-generated video

AI video generators need to believe that filmmakers will use their models in the production process. Otherwise...

OpenAI’s VP of global affairs claims o1 is ‘virtually perfect’ at correcting bias, but the data doesn’t quite back that up

Departures might be dominating the week’s OpenAI-related headlines. But comments on AI bias from Anna Makanju, the...

Former Brex COO who now heads unicorn fintech Figure says GPT is already upending the mortgage industry

Lending startup Figure announced today a rollout of AI tooling to make the home lending process more...

Security compliance unicorn Drata lays off 9% of its workforce

Drata, a security compliance automation platform that helps companies adhere to frameworks such as SOC 2 and GDPR, has laid...

Nomi AI wants to make the most emotionally intelligent chatbots on the market

As OpenAI boasts about its o1 model’s increased thoughtfulness, a small, self-funded startup Nomi AI is building...

Zap Energy investors in recent $130M round included Soros Fund and Laurene Powell Jobs’ Emerson Collective

The race for commercial fusion power is heating up. Investors have poured money into fusion startups over the...

Uber snags another robotaxi deal, aviation startups land VC bucks, and where Rivian Foundation money is going

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of...