Raishma

Year founded 2013
HQ Location London
Sector Fashion Design
Staff count 4
Turnover £1m
Raishma Islam has created over 2,000 couture and bridal gowns since 1998. In 2013, with the help from the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme-qualifying investment, she entered the ready-to-wear business, creating a range for the premium high street.
www.raishma.co.uk
SEIS funding helped us develop our e-commerce platform giving us a beautiful functional website so we could reach more customers.

Lynn woodward

Non-executive Director

Establishing concessions with big-name retailers such as John Lewis and House of Fraser was a brilliant way to build exposure to the brand.

Raishma Islam

Founder

Designing couture with royal credentials

After working as assistant designer to Princess Diana’s wedding dress designer, Elizabeth Emmanuel, Raishma launched her own brand in 1998. The London-based designer gained prominence in the industry through her unique design aesthetic. Since then, Raishma has dressed celebrities and royalty including Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice.


A fresh brand for existing customers

As her exclusive designs were filling a gap in the market, Raishma built up a loyal customer base over 15 years. With her designs gaining popular demand, Raishma understood the potential of a mass-market range for the high street.

Her expertise and experience as a couturier gave her a point of difference. With her meticulous eye for detail, true craftsmanship and high-quality materials, Raishma created a more accessible ready-to-wear range.


Searching for a business mentor

By the end of 2013 Raishma knew she had the market, the skills and the drive to create a new ready-to-wear label. But as a designer, she had little experience or expertise in the highly competitive world of mainstream retail and wholesale.

As fate would have it, Jenson Solutions and Jenson Funding Partners, strategic and operational advisors to the Jenson SEIS Fund, were on the lookout for small start-ups that would qualify for Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) funding.

“It was the first year of Jenson’s SEIS fund, it had already invested in a number of tech companies, but was on the lookout to have a broad-reaching portfolio,” says Lynn Woodward, non-executive director.


A controlling stake is key

Raishma was clear from the start that retaining a controlling stake in her new company was a top priority, so all fundraising has been done with this in mind.

The SEIS investment allowed the company to build its first e-commerce platform, develop its strategy, and manufacture stock. Raishma’s first ever website went live in 2014. Then a further funding round in 2016 helped the business expand into retail via concessions and wholesale and open a central London store.


From retail to wholesale

The business grew its customer base online and established concessions with big-name retailers such as John Lewis and House of Fraser in 2016. “It was a brilliant way to build exposure to the brand,” says Raishma.

But concessions on their own, cautions Woodward, do not offer the best strategy for the business. Concessions charge a “hefty margin” and tie a lot of cash up in stock, she says.

Wholesale, on the other hand, had the potential to be much more lucrative. A turning point, says Woodward, was signing a wholesale deal with Debenhams in the Middle East.

Right now, if required, the company can fulfil the orders by using a trade finance company that provides the bridging funds to fulfil the order until the client pays.

It’s about finding that perfect partner who can provide capital but also open doors.

Lynn Woodward, Raishma

Open to a new round of funding

Woodward says that this model is working for the current £1m turnover. However, Raishma “definitely wants to further increase online sales and grow the UK and global wholesale business” and this could require another funding round.

The company is looking for potential Enterprise Investment Scheme funding. Woodward says: “It’s about finding that perfect partner who can provide capital but also open doors.”


Key Metrics

3,000

beads used in a collection

300

Metres of fabric in a collection

130%

Turnover growth year on year

Sources of capital
Government Support
  • Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme

Related Stories

Hiring Hub
After a “divorce-like” initial setback with early investors, Hiring Hub’s co-founder and CEO Simon Swan discovered that it’s possible for a scaling business to get back on track. Read more...
Calcivis
Founder Adam Christie credits early hiring of top talent and funding from Scotland’s Archangels as key to his scale-up success, helping Calcivis to revolutionise dentistry with its novel tool that diagnoses active tooth decay. Read more...
Zappi
With revenues close to £20m in 2017, founder and CEO Steven Phillips says he’s determined that cashflow will never slow Zappi’s global scale-up ambitions. Read more...
Firefly
Firefly’s co-founders Simon Hay and Joe Mathewson created the education technology solution out of their “own frustrations” about offline studying while doing their GCSEs, and continue to achieve full marks for international scale-up success. Read more...
Diamond Logistics
Founder Kate Lester had a “Kodak moment” five years ago to scale up her business after collapses in the same-day courier market made her realise her business would “become extinct”. Read more...
Creative Nature
Using all her savings Julianne Ponan set up vegan-friendly superfoods company Creative Nature, and despite being rejected by dozens of investors early on the company’s sales of allergen-free products have soared. Read more...