"We are a good example of a relatively structured approach to setting up a business. First we wanted to start a business, then we both started to work: Christoph Pregizer at Siemens, me at Volkswagen. At some point we were convinced that our founding idea had the right direction and we gave up our jobs," says engineer Lukas Posniak. The goal of both of them was to create a training environment for Golf with the help of Augmented Reality (AR). "We then discussed various ideas during this phase, most of which weren't very promising. This was different with PuttView: "Even though the idea sounded relatively crazy, we saw great potential in it," adds Christoph, who is responsible for the technical side at PuttView. Lukas takes care of the business.
In good hands
"In the beginning, we needed a mentor for our project. That's why we approached professors all over Germany who are experts in Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality. Prof. Dr. Frank Steinicke, from the 'Human-Computer Interaction' department at the University of Hamburg, was at the top of the list," reports Lukas. After a meeting they found out: it fits. On the one hand in terms of content, on the other hand Prof. Dr. Frank Steinecke was also keen on the implementation - he had already had a taste of golf.
The two engineers moved especially to Hamburg for the foundation. "So basically we came to the university from the outside. We found it positive that it went so smoothly and that we were so well received. Nils Neumann from the start-up consultancy then worked with us on the Exist applications. Through Prof. Steinicke, contact was established with a programmer who was still missing from the team. Of course, we have written codes before, but we were far away from software development," explains Christoph.
Personnel search
"In the beginning it was most difficult to find personnel at all. You only have one idea and no money. Nothing to lure people out with," says Lukas. In the meantime, PuttView has evolved: The startup now has 7 employees plus six part-timers.
At the moment we are looking for another software developer and a sales person. "But they are also in great demand on the market. So far, we've only been looking for academics. Now we are also looking for people with training. But where can you find them? You have to search like a truffle pig, because someone like that doesn't just knock on your door. The personal network is still the best here. We were also looking for our installer/electrician for the worldwide commissioning of our systems. I simply approached the electrician from the kitchen installation in my apartment. Although he wasn't interested in visiting the most beautiful golf courses in the world, he knew someone," says Lukas laughing. Christoph adds: "We asked the employment office for a pile of 15 people. They were all asked to apply, but only two of them contacted us."
Who does not dare, does not win
At that time, after the joint termination in 2015, Lukas and Christoph have for the first time dealt more intensively with the hardware side of the project. But already after one day it was clear: The available AR glasses were not even suitable for the development: "That was perhaps also a little naive of us. The glasses were just new on the market in 2015 and the marketing promised more than was actually possible. Our mentor, Prof. Dr. Steinecke, also didn't know these glasses well enough for an assessment. When we held them in our hands, the world suddenly looked different. But that didn't turn out to be so bad in retrospect. Because our naivety ensured that we made a virtue out of necessity and initially developed PuttView as an indoor version. Although our market forecasts for this were initially very skeptical, we have now been taught better," Christoph continues. They simply thought about how the developed information could get into the player's field of vision: "In the meantime we even thought about lasers for visualization on the golf course. But you would have had to wear protective glasses," adds Lukas with a laugh.
After two futile test days with the AR glasses, we first came across the beamer: "Using a projector, we were able to show the finish line, ball course, alignment aid and movement recommendations - but only when putting on the indoor green. For us, this should above all be an intermediate step", says Christoph.
An important step was the InnoRampUp funding of the city of Hamburg, says Lukas: "Especially for the further development of the beamer prototype. Otherwise we wouldn't be where we are today. We were always very sales-oriented. That is essential. Sometimes I have the feeling with other start-ups that they are struggling from financing to financing. But when will sales come? When does the product come to the customer? Christoph adds: "Because the only currency that counts at the end of the day is sales. Customers and sales. Everything else is a dream. Or a bet on the future."
The development of PuttView
Viewlicity GmbH was founded in October 2015. The name is a combination of the English terms "view" and "simplicity", which is intended to emphasize the focus on applications in the field of visualization and learning. PuttView was presented in April 2016 as the first product. This is a system in which the green surface is analyzed and stored as a 3D model. Thus it is possible to calculate the parameters for the perfect putt.
"The idea came during the golf training: It was somehow unsatisfactory, because the feedback was missing. Where do I actually have to play the ball? That was very random," explains Lukas.
Among other things, PuttView helps you to read the break, indicates the start direction and the speed. For Christoph the crucial point: "I have been playing golf for almost 20 years and am also an engineer. I knew that everything could be calculated. If you train and aim the wrong way or play at the wrong speed, many people don't recognize their mistakes well enough. This of course reduces the learning success and is frustrating. The visualized computer calculation gives you a reference and helps you to optimize your learning success. A trainer friend, who trains high school students, only allowed them to putt with Puttview for three months. Nothing else. For the majority of students, putting has improved due to the optimal feedback from the program."
In particular, the training of the speed control makes PuttView an extraordinary system: "It is the only training system that can display the speed of the ball when putting", emphasizes Lukas. Augmented reality visualizes this information for the golfer. The ideal putting line for the player is projected onto the green via a beamer. Bryson DeChambeau, one of the TOP10 golfers in the world rankings, calls this "brain training". Because what PuttView displays on the green is what should ideally take place in the golfer's head before the putt. Christoph is convinced that if the player has a concrete picture in his head of how the putt is to be carried out, he will usually succeed in doing so.
The feedback is positive and varied: "Each of our customers uses the system offered in their own way: Some paint a miniature golf course on their putting green, others only use the lines, are more visually on the move and train the brain. Everyone benefits individually. We want to respond to these diverse needs and not force them into our concept," says Lukas.
PuttView's innovative approach is confirmed by various awards, such as winning the Hamburg Innovation Award in the Idea category in 2015 and the Auggie Award, the "Oscar" of the Augmented Reality industry in 2016.
The first customer
But what happened on the business side? "At the end of the Exist phase, we had our first customer in 2016: Peter Merck from the Golf Lounge in Hamburg. At the beginning there was a big press event, magazines asked us. That brought us extremely forward. For us, it was the best showroom ever. In the first year, we had about three or four customers, each of whom felt like a breakthrough," says Lukas.
First the USA, then the rest of the world
First contacts were made at the PGA Show 2017 and some months later the first systems were delivered in the USA. One of our first customers in the USA was the golf professor Bryson DeChambeau. That was in April 2017, an absolute highlight for us! We've been working closely with him ever since," says Lukas. During the same period, we entered into several binding partnerships. Among others with Englishman Phil Kenyon, probably the most famous putt trainer, who permanently has four to five top ten players under his wing and trains them in his putt studio.
One of the important distribution partnerships is with Full Swing Golf, a large company for golf simulators: they produce a movable green that can be adjusted with motors (under the green). With this PuttView 2018 was on the biggest golf fair of the world in Orlando, USA. So you got your foot in the door of the world's biggest golf market.
Christoph: "The USA is our main market. Especially the Tier One Colleges and Schools, which offer an indoor facility for 10 to 20 million for the bad weather. Soon we will have equipped ten of them. If one wants it, the others want it too:
When we installed the first system in Texas, it was for two entrepreneurs who wanted to do their own thing with an indoor golf location there. In summer they have about 35 degrees, nobody wants to play outside. I was skeptical at first, but when we told you they were the first in Texas and number five in the US, they were totally over the moon."
Further information via https://www.puttview.com/