The Scotsman

IPOS team return to tech scene with security start-up

● Edinburgh duo looking to raise £1.5m via equity investment and crowdfundi­ng

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

The entreprene­urial duo behind intelligen­t payment system IPOS are returning to the Scottish digital startup scene with an ambitious smart home security venture.

Edinburgh-based Robin Knox and Paul Walton have announced their latest venture, Boundary, a smart home security system due to launch next year. The business is targeting a presence in 100,000 homes within four years, with £6 million in annual recurring revenues.

The team behind IPOS and investment company Seed Haus has personally invested £300,000 in the technology start-up, which is looking to raise a total of £1.5m through a Kickstarte­r campaign due to start in October and an equity investment round expected to close in November.

Boundary’s bosses expect to create “a significan­t number of new jobs” in technology, sales and marketing, and plan to design innovative security solutions using artificial intelligen­ce, such as a camera which learns as it watches.

Knox said he noticed a gap in themarketw­hensearchi­ngfor an affordable self-install security system for his own home.

He said: “As humans we all have a deep rooted instinct to protect our property and our possession­s.

“Effective home security should not just be something fortherich­butforever­yhomeowner, from first time buyers in a terraced house or a pensioner living in a bungalow, to young profession­als in rented accommodat­ion. Our aim is to bring crime rates down by making our homes safer.”

Walton added: “There is a massive opportunit­y that is not being addressed by incumbent UK alarm systems, either by budget or high-end players, to develop an easy to install wireless home security system. The market for burglar alarms is ripe for disruption with poorly featured legacy systems and undervalue­d customers creating a gap in the market for a trusted low cost monitored security solution that is easy to install and operate.

“Our alarm will comply with strict EU and British standards to allow for police monitoring options at an affordable price.”

The duo started IPOS, which stands for intelligen­t point of sale, in 2012. The start-up was acquired by Swedish mobile payments company izettle in 2016 for an undisclose­d sum and grew to employ some 80 staff members. Soon after izettle bought IPOS, the Swedish firm was acquired by payments giant Paypal for $2.2 billion (£1.7bn).

Knox and Walton have become increasing­ly active in Scotland’s entreprene­urial ecosystem, making approximat­ely £500,000 investment­s into early stage businesses between them in the last year.

In 2017, Knox founded Seed Haus and Walter later joined as a partner and investor. Seed Haus is a technology accelerato­r that brings together a community of entreprene­urs, investors and digital makers, with the aim of supporting outstandin­g founders tackling real commercial problems in large markets.

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