Jenny Button first thought of Emm during the COVID lockdown. She was usingย anย Oura ring and the Whoop monitoring band andย gettingย insights aboutย her body, but thereย wasnโtย a device that could provide data about one of the most important aspectsย โ reproductive andย menstrualย health.ย ย
โIt seemed crazy to me, because these are things that every woman wants to be able to track and better understand,โ she told TechCrunch. She thought to herself: Why not make a wearable deviceย that can tellย someoneย more about their reproductive health? She penned a letter to one of the engineers at Dyson, made a connection, and started testing the idea.ย ย
โFive years later, following thousands ofย designsย and iterations and extended user testing, weโve revealed the worldโs first smart menstrual cup,โ said Button.ย ย
The UK-based company has also raised a $9 million (ยฃ6.8 million)ย seedย round, one led by Lunar Ventures as it prepares to officially launch its product next year.ย ย
The product functions like a regular menstrual cup โย designed toย store period bloodย rather than absorb it.ย But Emmโs medical-gradeย siliconeย isย โfitted with ultra-thin, advanced sensor technology.โย This sensor gathers data that willย helpย usersย understandย patternsย aboutย theirย cycles.ย Button hopes thatย it could โtransform the research, diagnosis andย treatmentย ofย menstrualย and reproductive healthย conditions.โย ย
Sheย isnโtย the only one who thinks this way.ย Otherย femtechย founders toldย The Guardianย a few months agoย thatย menstrual blood was an โoverlookedย opportunityย in womenโs healthโย that could offerย insightsย not available from health tests based on circulatory blood.ย
It could, for instance, help diagnoseย painful andย often misdiagnosedย medical conditions like endometriosis.ย ย
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โOne in ten women todayย suffer from endometriosis,โย Button said. โA condition that, like many others in reproductive health, takes an average of seven to ten years to diagnose.โย
That delayย โisย largely dueย to the lack of meaningful data and poorย characterizationย of menstrual health in clinical settings,โย Button believes. โThere have been no reliable tools to accurately and objectively track that aspect of health until now.โย
Beyond endometriosis, she added thatย one in three womenย experiences โsevere reproductive health issuesโ throughout their lives.ย ย
Data gathered from the Emm app isย encrypted and stored securely,ย with two-factor authentication.ย โItโs also always anonymized or pseudonymized,โ meaning personal identifiers are removed or replaced with codes, โand will only be accessed by the people at Emm whoย genuinelyย need it,โ she said.ย
Button used the word โstrategicโ to describe her funding roundย and saidย she connectedย with her lead investor through her network. Others in the round include Alumni Ventures (who backed Oura), The Labcorp Venture Fund andย BlueLionย Global. Money will be used to launch the productย intoย the UK market next year, she said, adding that the waitlist hasย already toppedย 30,000 pre-orders to go live soon.ย ย
Capital will also be used for research and development.ย Buttonย hopes toย enter the U.S. marketย in early 2027.ย ย
โMenstrual health is only the jumping off point for Emm,โ said Button. โUltimately, Iย believe we will have a profound impact on womenโs health more broadly,โ she continued, adding she hopes to expand the productย one day,ย perhaps intoย diagnosis, other digital care tools, and evenย therapeutics.ย ย
โOur mission is to accelerate diagnosis, equip people with the data to advocate for themselves, andย ultimately helpย them take control of their own bodies and health journeys,โย she said.ย


