Eyebot raised $6M for AI-powered kiosks that provide 90-second eye exams without optometrist

Date:

Share post:


Over half of Americans wear corrective glasses or contact lenses. While there isn’t a shortage of low-cost and luxury frames available online or in stores, consumers can only buy them with a current eyeglass prescription.

That means that they first need an eye exam from an optometrist to receive that prescription. But, due to a nationwide shortage of eye care practitioners, it may take weeks, especially in rural areas, to get an appointment. 

Eyebot, a new startup coming out of stealth on Thursday, wants to reduce the time it takes to receive an eye exam to about 90 seconds without the direct involvement of an optometrist. Starting in October, the Boston-based company will roll out its self-serv, vision-testing terminals in shopping centers, grocery stores and pharmacies in New England.

Anyone who wants to have their vision checked can walk up to Eyebot’s 5-ish-foot kiosk, press a button, and the company’s computer vision technology will automatically scan the person’s eyes, extracting eyeglass or contact lens prescription. (While Eyebot can’t perform initial fittings of contact lenses, it can update an existing prescription.) 

Eyebot’s founder and CEO Matthias Hofmann said he developed similar technology ten years ago at EyeNetra, a startup that used smartphones to test eyesight. (EyeNetra went out of business several years ago, according to Hoffman, who worked there as the leading engineer until 2015.)

“We realized that using smartphones is not actually the solution,” said Hoffman, who, before joining EyeNetra, was a postdoctoral researcher in tomography at Harvard Medical School. “What people want is a fully automated experience where they don’t have to learn or do anything complicated. Our technology now allows people to simply stand in front of our units.”

Eyebot-generated prescriptions are finalized by teledoctors within 24 hours, and consumers who want to purchase glasses from any retailer must pay $30 for their exam. But if they purchase glasses from one of Eyebot’s partner brands, the eye exam is free.  (The technology is registered with the FDA, Hoffman said.) 

The company hopes that major eyeglass brands will rent Eyebot terminals and put them in the retail locations of their choice. Once a shopper finalizes their exam, they can choose to buy eyeglasses from that brand directly on a touchscreen within the kiosk or by using their smartphone.  Eyebot plans to make money by partnering with these eyewear brands and taking a commission on each sale.

“Retailers are looking for new channels to reach the customers,” Hoffman said. “Now they have an opportunity to show their brand in CVS, Walgreens, Stop and Shop, Kroger and on college campuses.”

Eyebot is close to finalizing partnership agreements with several large eyeglass and contact lens merchants, Hoffman said. “It’s a very lucrative model. The demand for what we’re doing is very high.”

Demand for investing in Eyebot’s seed round was high, too, according to Hoffman. On Thursday, the company announced a $6 million funding round led by AlleyCorpand Ubiquity Ventures with participation from Susa Ventures, Village Global, Baukunst, Ravelin, and Spacecadet.

The capital will be used for expansion to geographies. 



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

News outlets are accusing Perplexity of plagiarism and unethical web scraping

In the age of generative AI, when chatbots can provide detailed answers to questions based on content...

Computing and shielding startups join forces to put AI-capable chips in space

Sophisticated spacecraft often run on shockingly outdated computing systems: consider that the Perseverance rover runs on a...

Industry Ventures raises a $900M fund for investing in small, early-stage VCs and their breakout startups

The venture fundraising trend in 2024 is fairly clear by now: Large, established VC firms are continuing...

Indian edtech Unacademy cuts another 250 jobs

Indian edtech giant Unacademy is laying off about 250 employees, the latest in a series of layoffs...

Apple adds support for new languages across lock screen, keyboard and search on iOS 18

Apple unveiled iOS 18 last month at its Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC). Since then, the company has...

Anthropic looks to fund a new, more comprehensive generation of AI benchmarks

Anthropic is launching a program to fund the development of new types of benchmarks capable of evaluating...

Senators urge Synapse’s owners, partners, and VC backers to restore customers’ access to their money

A group of senators has banded together to urge Synapse’s owners and bank and fintech partners to...

TechCrunch Space: Star spangled

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. I hope everyone has a fantastic July 4 this week....