Caught between high consumer demand and difficult relations with investors and advertisers, the sextech industry is an underfunded but scalable market. The industry, which is now expected to hit $40B by 2023, is showing no signs of slowing down.
Demand is on the rise for the products and services offered by the industry, which spans sexual wellbeing services, educational platforms, toys and apps. But despite this, startups in the space face huge setbacks and barriers to growth. Founders are often confronted with blanket bans on social media and unwilling investors as a result of âanti-viceâ restrictions â the morality clauses that investors must stick to â and persisting taboos around sex.
Maddyness spoke to five founders across the space who aim to educate, empower and normalise conversations about sex, to discover the difficulties they overcame in growing their businesses.
Emma Sayle: Killing Kittens
Emma Sayle launched Killing Kittens over 15 years ago to help women explore their sexuality in a safe environment. The startup regularly hosts female-orientated sex parties â and more recently digital events â connecting 160,000 members across the world.
But though the business is close to achieving a ÂŁ3M investment, the funding process wasnât always so smooth, something Emma attributes to âold fashioned puritanical prudishnessâ within the investment landscape.
âWhen the word 'sex' is mentioned, everyone within that sector is banded together by the providers," said Emma. "In the eyes of the big search engines, they put us together with the likes of PornHub and camsites, which is just not what we are about."
The difficulty in securing funding means founders in the sex space often rely on alternatives such as crowdfunding. Killing Kittens raised ÂŁ1.4M using this method between 2018 and 2020, and recently secured an investment from the UK Governmentâs Future Fund.
On top of events, the startup also offers sex education and chat platforms for consenting adults. But the range of experiences on offer has meant that digital advertising has been ânigh on impossible.âÂ
âThatâs why we decided to build our own social media platform and create our own world that is free from puritanical advertising standards that don't seem to think women should be given the space to have fun and explore their sexuality,â said Emma.
Still, Emma admitted that the hardest part about being a founder in the space was other peopleâs opinions, from family and friends warning getting involved in the sex industry was a âbad ideaâ to Silicon Valley institutions turning the business away.
âFor some reason people (men) get very defensive when the subject of women's sexuality is pushed into the foreground,â said Emma. âIf I was working in agritech, gaming or any other tech area, we would have had a lot more support, but the hurdles have made us stronger.â
Soumyadip Rakshit: MysteryVibe
For Soumyadip, fundraising has been a hurdle in growing his startup for sexual health products. MysteryVibe brings together engineering and medicine to create medical devices designed to target sexual dysfunctions such as pain, dryness, arousal disorder and erectile dysfunction.
Confronted with a financial sector that he describes as âcautious and conservative,â Soumyadip admitted finding the capital needed for the research, development, test and trial of medical devices difficult.Â
âIf those investors donât want to be associated with sex, even if itâs proven to be profitable, that limits the options where funding can be found for sextech companies,â he said. "Compounding this problem is the fact that sextech is a nascent field with few big companies and even fewer unicorns.â
Though sexual health issues are one of the most common conditions people face every day â with around 75% never seeking medical help â Soumyadip says that sextech companies like MysteryVibe aiming to target these issues still find it hard to grow their reach on social media. According to him, this is because any type of sex content, regardless of nature, is deemed âinappropriate.â
He added: âMost social media companies choose to blanket ban all things sex instead of taking a nuanced look at it.â
Marie Comacle: Puissante
Determined to break taboos associated with female sexuality and masturbation, Marie Comacle said the hardest part about being a founder in the space was the âglobal vision of sextech.â
Growing her startup Puissante â meaning âpowerfulâ â in France has been particularly difficult because âitâs still a major taboo, so everyone is really fearful of the area,â she said, adding that one investor had turned her away because they didnât want the âimageâ of associating with sexual wellness products and vibrators.
âThey know a lot about foodtech or whatever, but concerning sextech there's a real lack of knowledge and it doesn't help, especially when we're talking about womenâs sexuality,â she said.
Having also turned to other means of advertising â such as sponsoring podcasts â after facing shadowbans on Facebook, Marie said that mentality needs to change.
âYou still have ads for men which are allowed. That's really annoying and frustrating, but that's the game with people who can't understand that a breast is a good thing.â
Sachin Raoul: Blueheart
Blueheartâs Sachin Raoul also spoke of investor blindness to the scalability and demand for sexual health products.
âTime after time we speak to investors who say, 'relationship problems, thatâs a pretty niche problem', despite the fact that theyâve seen how the ED market exploded when Pfizer launched Viagra,â he said. âThese arenât niche issues, theyâre enormous, but itâs challenging to paint a future of the world that looks so different from today.â
After experiencing issues which sex took on his own mental health, Sachin created Blueheart â a digital therapeutic platform â to âtear down accessibility barriersâ attached to pricey sex therapy.
Asked whether he faced any particular challenges in advertising his startup, Sachin said the biggest barrier was the âgrey areaâ attached to sex.
âOn the one hand, they donât want anyone advertising anything that resembles sex. On the other hand, every company in the world is selling sex in some form, from perfume ads to pop music, they are all hyper-sexualised. So, they canât have blanket rules against things that are âsexualââ he explained.
Sachin said that the unwillingness to speak about sex openly is what steers conversation and attention away from the sex industry. Although young people are much better at discussing sex and emotions freely, he said that those who have the power to invest still belong to the âold guard.â
âThat results in having young people very excited by what youâre doing, to have it shot down by their superiors higher up the food chain," he added.
Chloe Macintosh: Kama
Chloe Macintosh knew she wanted to innovate in the sex industry after realising there was no brand to help her understand what was happening to her body while pregnant with her son.
After realising that it was âimpossible" to raise money in the space, Chloe said she didnât feel ready to launch until that changed.
Kama, the sex education platform designed to help people better understand and connect with their bodies and relationships, launched only last year.
So far, the startup has relied predominantly on US-based investors.âEuropean investors come from traditional finance and theyâre usually quite privileged, middle class, white male⊠which gives you a bit of an insight in how they would make decisions,â she said.
Chloe said the hardest part about fundraising in the sex space â what she calls a âdisruptiveâ industryâ â is the tendency for founders to âease it towards people (investors) so they donât get scared of what it might be.âÂ
She added: âWe need to see investors as advocates and not just see money, because in our sector, thatâs what will make things change.âÂ
As a founder in the sex space, Chloe also revealed the added responsibility she felt to âlook after people and give them an environment thatâs safe and feels good.â
âThis industry needs the right kind of attention,â she added. âSexuality has been corrupted, used and abused, and we need to bring it back to market in a way that will really help people.â