Jenny Griffiths
Jenny Griffiths is the founder and CEO of Snap Vision.[1] She is a software engineer turned entrepreneur.
She has been featured on the Europe's and World's Top 50 Women in Tech 2018 by Forbes lists. She was appointed MBE for Services to Innovation in 2015,[2] and in 2019 was awarded the Royal Academy of Engineering's Silver Medal for contributions to UK engineering.[3] She has also been selected in Drapers 30 Under 30 and Forbes European list in the "Consumer Technology" category 2016.[4]
Education
[edit]She graduated in Computer Science from the University of Bristol in 2009. Before graduating, she won the New Enterprise Competition at the university.[4][5]
Career
[edit]After graduating, she worked as a project manager at a cyber-security firm while working in parallel on developing Snap Vision, a visual search engine (a technology that teaches computer how to see), and later turned it into Snap Fashion, an app and a website. She kept on working as a project manager until 2012 when she quit to take her business, Snap Fashion, live. Snap Fashion became Snap Vision when she started licensing the technology to other businesses beyond her original app and website.
Snap Vision is a visual search platform which licenses technologies to publishers and retailers to improve product discoverability make images shoppable. They have licensed technology to the likes of Westfield[6] and Time Inc,[7] and recently won Oracle's marketing innovation award for their technology.[8]
Her original application is also still live and growing. Snap Fashion is an app and website that allows shoppers to find the clothes they like based on a picture, taken with a smartphone or from a magazine. The app searches for it, for matching outfit and compare prices from the database of retailers. In 2019, the database already counted with more than 110 retailers. On the other hand, the Snap Fashion InStore tool aimed at taking the visual search concept into the fitting rooms of High Street stores.[9] The app would provide consumer advice regarding fashion, clothing and clothing accessories by asking a set of questions to someone trying clothes in the fitting room.
From graduation, 2009, until 2012, she struggled to find attention and funding. Although fashion magazines liked it, most male-centric tech publication did not show interest. Jenny said “Technology wise, it was hard to get noticed, probably because we are a female-based product”. It changed when she won BIG, the British Innovation Gateway Award, an annual contest organized by CISCO offering money prize and marketing, public relations and legal support in addition to a year mentorship.[10]
In 2016, she was awarded a £1 million contract under Innovate UK's re-imagining the High Street' SBRI (Small Business Research Initiative) programme to create Snap InStore and raised £2 million in the company's Series A round of financing.[11] Snap Fashion was Time Inc.’s first venture capital investment outside of the US, which is something Jenny Griffiths is very proud of. She has since raised further rounds of finance to continue to grow the business.
The technology went on to win multiple awards or be in the final rounds of prestigious competitions such as
- Winner, Re-imagining the High St - SBRI & TSB Funding Competition, 2014
- Winner, UK Mobile & App Design Awards - SBRI & TSB Funding Competition, 2014
- Creative Entrepreneur of the Year 2013 - British Council & The Guardian, 2013
- 23rd Most Influential Woman in UK IT 2013 - Computer Weekly, 2013
- Winner - Young Guns 5 to Watch - Young Guns / Growing Business, 2013
- Future 50 Entrepreneur - Ernst&Young
- Winner - Cisco British Innovation Gateway Awards - Cisco, 2012
- Winner - Decoded Fashion, 2012 - Decoded Fashion
- Winner - Future 50 Competition - Red Bull and Real Business Magazine, 2011
- Winner - Tech City Launchpad Competition - Technology Strategy Board, 2011
- Winner - New Enterprise Competition - University of Bristol, 2009
Jenny Griffiths has been called an ambassador for women in tech[12] and she truly thinks women who want to go into the tech industry, or just young people hoping to set up a business, need to see successful entrepreneurs who can also speak honestly about what it takes to set up a business.
She renamed her company from Snap Fashion to SnapTech in 2016,[13] and to Snap Vision in 2020, and currently offers 9 different products.
Awards
[edit]- 2009: MBE for services to digital innovation in the fashion industry.
- 2012: Cisco British Innovation Award
- 2014: British Council's Creative Entrepreneur of the Year.
- 2015: MBE for Services to Innovation in the Digital Fashion Industry
- 2019: Royal Academy of Engineering Silver Medal
References
[edit]- ^ "Changing the way the world shops | Snap Vision". www.snap.vision. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ Bristol, University of. "June: MBE for computer science graduate Jenny | News and features | University of Bristol". www.bristol.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "Royal Academy of Engineering". 1 July 2019.
- ^ a b "Jenny Griffiths". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Bristol, University of. "June: MBE for computer science graduate Jenny | News | University of Bristol". www.bristol.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Thomson, Rebecca (2014-03-24). "Blog: Westfield launches Snap Fashion site to inspire shoppers". Retail Week. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ Jones, Nina (2015-08-10). "Time Inc. U.K. Invests in Snap Fashion". WWD. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "Oracle" (PDF).
- ^ "Snap Fashion: digital business revolutionising the way we shop". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Paynter, Ben (2013-04-05). "The Power Of Competition In Creativity: Cisco's "BIG" Jolt For Startups". Fast Company. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Hounslea, Tara (2015-08-10). "Marie Claire publisher Time Inc invests in Snap Fashion". Drapers. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "Meet our customer: female founder of Snap Fashion". Hiscox Business Blog. 2018-03-08. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
- ^ team, Snap Tech (2017-02-06). "Snap Tech… the company formerly known as Snap Fashion". Medium. Retrieved 2020-01-28.