Carla and Warwick Groves turned a $1,000 investment into a $1 million business. Credit: Supplied GuestPix · Supplied
Like most couples, Adelaide-based Carla and Warwick Groves had a professional photographer at their wedding to snap all the obligatory moments. But after the confetti settled and they’d got their beautiful photos in an album a friend sent a pic she’d snapped of the couple on the dance floor.
“She printed it for me and I still have it in a frame today. I wouldn’t have it if she hadn’t thought to send it to me,” Carla told Yahoo Finance, saying it’s her favourite photo from their special day.
It started her thinking and over the next few years as they completed the wedding circuit, Carla kept noticing a picture predicament.
A beloved guest photo (left) from Carla and Warwick Goves’ wedding day inspired them to start a business. Credit: Supplied/ GuestPix
At every wedding they went to (50 plus) Carla saw that despite the hundreds of photos people took, there was no easy way to share them. Not everybody was connected on the same social media platforms or in the same WhatsApp groups.
An idea for a photo sharing platform for guests to upload all their shots in high resolution was born and in 2021 the couple started working on it.
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“Warwick has a maths and computer engineering background and was working in big tech and I was in marketing and communications so we were fortunate to have the right mix of skills between us,” Carla, 39, from Adelaide, said.
By 2021 they also had two young daughters so it was a juggle with jobs and family life but they invested $1,000 into the project and in June 2022 were ready to launch what they called GuestPix.
Carla and Warwick Groves launched GuestPix in 2022. Picture: Supplied GuestPix
“There was no big launch, we ran a few ads and turned it on to see what happened. It was profitable from day one,” Carla said. “By October we had 800 orders for that month and we realised we’d got something. Warwick quit his corporate job to focus on it full time.”
GuestPix offered different packages depending on guest numbers and whether you wanted video included too.
The host was given a QR code to distribute to guests and they could upload their shots in high res without having to complete any annoying registration or download an app.
Wedding guests use a QR code in order to easily share their photos. Credit: Supplied GuestPix
“We launched with a minimum viable product, tested obsessively, refined based on real user feedback, and reinvested every single dollar into improving the experience,” Carla said. “That bootstrapped, hands-on approach allowed us to move fast, stay close to our users, and build something that genuinely solved a problem.”
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As the first photo sharing platform in the market the idea definitely hit a pain point and users soared.
The platform was built with global scalability and GuestPix was quickly in demand overseas. Within three years it’s become available in 102 countries and weddings is by no means its only focus now.
Carla and Warwick’s photo sharing business has now moved from beyond just weddings. Picture: Supplied GuestPix · ELISSA HOLMES 61 407189938
“We started with a simple tool built for weddings, but the vision for the brand was always to go beyond this category,” Carla said, explaining that’s why there was no ‘wedding’ reference in the brand name.
“It’s now a feature-rich platform with endless use cases from business events and festivals to reunions community gatherings, and birthdays.”
GuestPix saw 353 per cent year-on-year revenue growth from FY23 to FY24 and is now turning over $5 million annually. Unlike traditional consumer tech platforms, GuestPix didn’t raise capital and that initial $1,000 from the Groves’ savings was the only investment needed.
It currently has a tally of 100,000 events worldwide run by 20 mostly local staff.
Carla Groves with the customer services and marketing teams for GuestPix. Credit: Supplied GuestPix · ELISSA HOLMES 61 407189938
“Building a great team [is important]” Carla said. “You simply can’t scale alone.”
She also advised that grit, not glamour is what will help you go the distance. “Determination, resilience, and a deep belief in yourself and your why, are what carry you through the toughest days,” she said. “They say passion lights the spark, but grit keeps the fire going.”
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