The Signal: Interest in touchless (or contactless) technology has risen sharply since the outbreak of coronavirus.
Proxy, an SF-based startup which raised $42m in March (and $59m total) is a fast-growing player in the touchless technology space. In recent weeks, it has seen referring domains to its website spike.
Founded in 2016, the company provides a suite of products to enable touchless access for commercial and residential properties:
According to The Information, Proxy’s technology solution is rapidly expanding use cases outside of business solutions. The site reported that the California governor’s office recently called Proxy to see if it could help set up hygienic security systems in temporary hospitals or other sites.
If this is truly an inflection point for touchless tech in the US, it would bring this part of the world up to speed with what has long been the norm in other parts of the world.
In Asia, the rise of touchless technology -- whether that be through automated faucets, doors, or toilets -- was driven by at least 2 factors: 1) the continent’s experience with SARS in 2003; and 2) more recent building construction that can utilize the technology.
Perhaps the most notable divergence in "touchless" technology is America’s low adoption of non-cash payment methods. In the US, major mobile payment app adoption by consumers is stuck at 10% (vs. 80% for China).
The Opportunity: Based on the above, opportunities in the touchless technology space include:
Touchless Products: Using data from Jungle Scout -- an Amazon product finder and research tool -- we searched for which categories have seen the most growth over the past month for the following terms: "automatic," "touchless," and "contactless."
With quarantine measures in effect, Amazon has seen a surge in interest for products that limit the amount of touching involved. The items in the above table all have dual uses, for both commercial and residential settings.
Automatic shoe cover dispensers saw the fastest gains in search interest, followed by touchless technology for soap dispensers, sanitizer dispensers, thermometers, faucets, and door locks.
Moving forward, there is an opportunity to create "better" mousetraps for these touchless technologies and, also, to have expertise in outfitting new property builds that are optimized for hygiene (in the same way Proxy is being asked out to outfit government buildings).
Solutions for these issues that complement (rather than compete with) existing payment players can center around educating consumers (e.g., NerdWallet, Card Ratings) or scalable customer service solutions (e.g., fintech chatbots such as Kasisto, Trim, and Finn.ai).