The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Innovative seafood trading platform lands £17.5m boost

- KEITH FINDLAY

North-east seafood entreprene­ur Joel Watt’s fish trading platform Rooser has raised £17.5 million of capital funding to scale up.

The funding round was led by Index Ventures, which has previously backed Etsy, Farfetch, Deliveroo and Just Eat. Google Ventures and Point Nine Capital also took part.

Rooser plans to use the cash to advance its mission to eliminate seafood waste and improve transparen­cy of the fish supply chain.

Its innovative trading platform reduces friction for seafood buyers and sellers by combining stock management, a sales tool and access to a real-time, online marketplac­e.

Suppliers can use its cloud-based software tool to manage their stocks, as well as to upload the price and profile of different fish to a personalis­ed online store and Rooser’s wider digital market.

Via this single point of access, sellers gain the ability to manage and sell to their existing customers, faster and for free, as well as to access new buyers – many more than would be possible through traditiona­l methods.

In turn, buyers can search and transact through the platform, filtering by species, fishing area, method, delivery time and quality score.

Rooser currently facilitate­s seafood trading across more than 250 companies and in 13 European countries.

The business was launched in 2019 and is led by co-founder and chief executive Joel Watt, a graduate of Robert Gordon University.

Mr Watt started his career in accountanc­y roles with PwC and Bibby Offshore, and more recently spent six-and-a-half years as a director of Fraserburg­h fish processor Jack Taylor.

His father owned a fishing boat and his

grandfathe­r ran a processing factory.

The idea for Rooser came about when he and his cousin, Mark Stephen, establishe­d a fish processing plant, remortgagi­ng their parents’ homes to obtain the starting capital.

In fewer than seven years they grew their business to a staff of 50 and about £8.3m in annual turnover.

They saw first-hand how laborious and challengin­g the fish supply chain can be.

Mr Watt said: “The seafood industry is like this giant machine, with all these gears turning all the time at breakneck speed.

“Rooser was what we hacked together to solve the problem for our factory, and we realised the opportunit­y when other processors started wanting the software.

“In the long run, what we’re building should help us to understand and manage global fish stocks more responsibl­y, to see where our seafood comes from and to ensure the best-quality produce ends up on our plates.”

Rooser’s cash injection comes amid soaring global demand for seafood, partly driven by a greater consumer focus on healthy diets.

Georgia Stevenson, partner at Index Ventures, said: “The seafood market is huge, but it’s fragmented and mostly offline.

“Rooser promises to make the whole experience simpler and more efficient for everyone in the value chain – improving margins, reducing waste, giving buyers greater choice and sellers a bigger market.

“The Rooser team have lived and breathed seafood

for years, and they have an intuitive sense of how to help their customers.

“We believe they are uniquely placed to succeed in this exciting space.”

Fish worth more than £118 billion is traded in Europe every year, with around 35,000 different deals taking place between about 140,000 businesses.

Rooser says its technology can help traders save time, make more profits and waste less fish.

The company is currently focused on building its market and developing its stock management software for primary processors.

Further down the road, it plans to use the data on its platform to generate “meaningful” insights, models and reports for users.

 ?? ?? SCALING UP: Chief executive Joel Watt says Rooser can help manage global stocks.
SCALING UP: Chief executive Joel Watt says Rooser can help manage global stocks.

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