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Tag: e-commerce

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Poshmark’s ‘Promoted Closet’ tool lets sellers boost all their listings at once | TechCrunch


Poshmark, the social commerce site that lets people buy and sell new and used items to each other, launched a paid marketing tool on Thursday, giving sellers the ability to promote their entire shop at once. Poshmark’s new feature, called “Promoted Closet,” uses machine learning to automatically promote individual product listings from a seller’s entire […]

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Maad raises $3.2M seed funding


Maad, a B2B e-commerce startup based in Senegal, has secured $3.2 million debt-equity funding to bolster its growth in the western Africa country and to explore fresh opportunities in the wider Francophone region. The seed round was led by Ventures Platform, with participation from Seedstars International Ventures, Reflect Ventures, Oui Capital, Launch Africa, Voltron Capital […]

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.


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Diddo’s new funding will bring its shoppable TV API to streaming platforms | TechCrunch


Diddo is an API for streaming services and other platforms to integrate shoppable videos, enabling consumers to buy their favorite characters’ clothing and accessories directly on their screens. The company announced Wednesday that it raised $2.8 million in seed funding.

Diddo was founded in late 2022 by Rishi Nair, Ryan Sullivan and Pamela Chen, and started as a Google Chrome extension built for Nair’s and Sullivan’s mothers who are “Selling Sunset” fans and wanted to dress like their favorite reality TV stars. Now, the company has developed an API that uses proprietary computer vision AI technology to identify products in TV shows and movies. The AI also pulls comparable products so shoppers can buy lower-priced dupes if, for instance, Kim Kardashian’s $700 Balenciaga T-shirt is outside of their price range.

The funding round was led by Link Ventures, with participation from Neo, Dante D’Angelo (Valentino), Erica Lockheimer (LinkedIn), Camille Ricketts (ex-CMO of Notion), an unnamed Disney exec and Scott Forstall, who is known for leading the Apple team that created iOS, among others.

The new capital will support product development and expand the company’s eight-person team. The company recently hired Rob Sussman (also a Diddo investor) as COO; he’s the former Sundance CFO and executive vice president of MGM+ (formerly Epix).

Diddo has signed deals with 12 companies so far, including Dailymotion, Mux, the Highlights App, social sports platform PlayersOnly, film and TV collective The Big Picture, fashion brand Blair New York and more. The company also revealed that it’s actively in talks with Hulu and another streaming giant.

Image Credits: Diddo

Diddo says its API stands out from competitors due to its computer vision technology, which sits within a platform’s video player.

“We’re the only company that’s doing it so far,” Nair told TechCrunch. “These companies don’t have to send their video outside of their ecosystem. That’s a huge deal because all these media companies [think] it’s a non-starter if they have to send their video outside the API to run the computer vision. So, what we’ve been able to figure out is setting our computer vision within their video ecosystem so that we can go fully from video ingestion to commerce capabilities without leaving.”

One of the challenges about this, however, is that running computer vision over a video that is being watched by millions of users simultaneously is “incredibly tolling on the end user’s device,” Nair said. “In order to avoid this issue, we have decided to build out the product with a time-stamped approach to documenting the products. By this, we run the computer vision once over the video, where it identifies all of the products found within the content and puts them in a time-stamped database. Because the products in on-demand content do not change, we only need to run it one time on our side and require nothing from the streamer or the end user.”

Image Credits: Diddo

Additionally, no QR codes are required (like Peacock’s Must ShopTV feature), and products are not presented as intrusive advertisements (see Roku’s shoppable ads), so users aren’t removed from the viewing experience.

With Diddo, people can view all items in an interactive storefront after the episode has finished. They then complete the purchase through a native checkout capability, which includes integrations with major e-commerce services, such as Shopify, Amazon, WooCommerce, BigCommerce, Magento and Salesforce Cloud. Diddo also collects user data on which products people are interested in to recommend similar items to them in the future.

Diddo takes a 4% to 6% fee on all purchases made on the platform.

The recent funding round follows Paramount’s partnership with AI-powered shoppable technology Shopsense AI. The streamer debuted its new mobile shopping experience on April 7. Last week, Amazon’s Prime Video and Freevee released a free, ad-supported channel for shoppable livestreams.


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Amazon brings its 'Amazon Live' shoppable livestreams to Prime Video and Freevee | TechCrunch


Amazon is trying to keep live shopping relevant with the launch of an “Amazon Live” FAST (free ad-supported TV) channel on Prime Video and Freevee. Previously only available as a feature on desktop, mobile and Fire TV, the new live channel will give customers in the U.S. more ways to engage with interactive, shoppable content.

Amazon Live’s FAST channel will feature 24/7 programming from popular creators and celebrities, such as reality TV stars Lala Kent (“Vanderpump Rules”) and Paige DeSorbo (“Southern Charm”), who is also launching her own original show on Amazon Live, where she’ll develop brand new content. Brands like Tastemade and The Bump will also host streams to sell their products.

Viewers can browse and buy the items influencers show off by using the Amazon Shopping app on their mobile device. When entering “shop the show” into the search bar, users are directed in real time to a shopping carousel featuring the products they see on TV.

Image Credits: Amazon

This isn’t the first time Prime Video has introduced an e-commerce shopping experience on the streamer. To promote “The Boys” spinoff series “Gen V,” Amazon launched a virtual store selling merchandise and home goods based on Godolkin University, the superhero school in the show.

Last year, QVC and HSN — the top two shopping channels — launched linear offerings on Freevee, which were the only livestream shopping channels on the service at the time.

Amazon Live launched in 2019 as a QVC-like shopping experience to help brands get their products discovered and for talent to interact with fans. It rolled out the offering to customers in India in 2022. According to the company, more than 1 billion customers in the U.S. and India streamed Amazon Live’s shoppable videos in 2023 alone.

Despite Amazon’s success with live shopping, the format only makes up a small percentage of the e-commerce market. Last year, live shopping was anticipated to be worth $31.7 billion, however, total U.S. online retail sales reportedly reached $1.14 trillion.


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Robotic Automations

TikTok Shop expands its secondhand luxury fashion offering to the UK | TechCrunch


TikTok Shop, TikTok’s social commerce marketplace, is launching a secondhand luxury category in the U.K., putting it in closer competition with The RealReal, Vestiaire Collective, Depop, Poshmark, and Mercari, among others. The offering has already existed in TikTok Shop U.S. for over six months.

The new category allows customers in the U.K. to purchase pre-owned high-end clothing, designer handbags, and other accessories, all without leaving the TikTok app. At launch, only five U.K. brands are available, including Sellier, Luxe Collective, Sign of the Times, HardlyEverWornIt, and Break Archive.

Since launching TikTok Shop in 2022, the platform has sold around $1 billion or more worth of products. However, despite its success, some argue that TikTok Shop is ruining the short-form video-sharing app, claiming fakes and poor-quality products are flooding the marketplace. Counterfeits are the biggest risk when buying pre-owned luxury goods online, with even the largest e-commerce giants (Amazon, eBay, and others) facing authenticity issues.

Like all resale marketplaces, TikTok Shop has an anti-counterfeit policy that guarantees a full refund if a seller is proven to have sold a counterfeit product. Bloomberg recently reported that the company is in talks with luxury goods company LVMH to help crack down on counterfeiting.

All secondhand brands on TikTok Shop U.S. are required to have certificates from third-party authenticators. TikTok partnered with authentication services Entrupy and Real Authentication to ensure that designer handbags on the platform are genuine.

Meanwhile, a TikTok spokesperson told TechCrunch that the five U.K. brands all have their own in-house authentication process. They wouldn’t say when it would begin accepting other secondhand brands.

The launch of TikTok Shop’s secondhand luxury category is a strategic move to tap into the growing market of preowned luxury items. The secondhand luxury market is a thriving multibillion-dollar business, with an estimated $49.3 billion (€45 billion) worth of secondhand designer items sold worldwide in 2023.

Additionally, this expansion aligns with the increasing trend of people embracing preloved fashion, and it opens up new avenues for secondhand brands in the U.K. to reach a wider customer base. The popularity of secondhand fashion on TikTok is evident, with over 144,000 TikTok posts using the hashtag #secondhandfashion, which has garnered approximately 1.2 billion views.

Today’s announcement arrives on the heels of the U.S. House of Representatives passing a bill that requires ByteDance to sell TikTok or face a ban in the U.S., a bill that appears to be gaining support in the Senate. A ban would be a serious blow to American merchants selling on the app. According to the company, the short video-sharing app generated $14.7 billion for small- to mid-size businesses in 2023.




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Live selling startup CommentSold uses AI to generate shoppable, social-ready clips | TechCrunch


CommentSold, the e-commerce tech startup that provides web and video tools to online retailers, launched a new generative AI-powered tool on Wednesday that can sift through livestreamed footage and generate short product explainer videos for sellers to post to their website, app and social media platforms.

The “AI ClipHero” feature creates short clips from livestreamed selling events, which often last for hours. Instead of retailers rewatching content and scouring for relevant clips to edit and post, CommentSold’s new tool saves them some time by automatically identifying the most interesting parts of the livestream for customers who missed the event to get a brief summary of the products. The tool also uses speech recognition to generate captions.

“Shoppable ‘explainer’ videos are the most powerful video commerce medium right now, with TikTok and Instagram becoming the primary way Gen Z discovers, learns about products and purchases products. However, creating shoppable videos [requires] significant production times,” CommentSold CEO Guatam Goswami told TechCrunch.

Image Credits: CommentSold

AI-powered clipping software isn’t new, but not many companies have developed AI-powered tools specifically designed for live commerce. Various startups (Powder, Eklipse, and others), though, have introduced similar features for content creators to capture highlights from gaming streams.

“Companies like TikTok and Twitch have been trying to create AI that can create shoppable videos from live-stream events … CommentSold is now the first provider to launch a commercially available AI, which learns from millions of hours of livestreams in CommentSold’s library to identify and create product explainer videos from livestream selling events,” Goswami said.

In addition to its AI ClipHero feature, CommentSold recently rolled out PopClips, which allows retailers to tag products in a banner at the bottom of each clip to direct customers to the product page and drive more sales. The company also provides tools for custom website and mobile app building, as well as systems to automate inventory, invoices, shipping, and more.

Since launching in 2017, CommentSold now helps over 7,000 small- and mid-sized businesses deliver live shopping and e-commerce experiences. According to the company, it has facilitated the sale of over 180 million items with more than $4.4 billion in lifetime gross merchandise value (GMV), up from $3.8 billion in 2023.


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TikTok ban could harm Amazon sellers looking for alternatives | TechCrunch


In March, the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill that could force ByteDance to divest TikTok or face a ban in U.S. app stores. Much of the related discussion and debate has centered around American data security and speech rights, but a potential move also highlights something else: TikTok is growing its focus on e-commerce, but the interplay of tech giants and geopolitics is squeezing smaller merchants.

Over the past few months, merchants — many of them from China — looking for an Amazon alternative have flocked to TikTok to peddle clothes, cosmetics, electronics and a variety of other products to U.S. buyers, by way of TikTok Shop. In interviews with TechCrunch, sellers from Shenzhen — the Chinese megacity that’s a major hub for Amazon merchants —  said they felt a collective sense of frustration over rising geopolitical tensions and “helplessness” about a potential TikTok ban.

“The situation is not within our control,” a retailer specializing in maternity and baby products told TechCrunch. “It’s just difficult to know how things will develop.” With existing supply chains hard to shift, “we just have to play it by ear.” (The sellers asked not to be named due to political sensitivities.)

TikTok Shop officially launched in September 2023 with 200,000 merchants already on board. But since then it has not provided any updated numbers on how many merchants are currently on the platform, nor how much they sell there, nor how many sell elsewhere (and where else that might be).

Research from Jungle Scout, an Amazon data intelligence provider, gives some idea of TikTok’s e-commerce impact, however. It found that 20% of Amazon sellers, brands, and businesses have plans to expand to TikTok Shop this year. Before the current political backlash took off, ByteDance reportedly projected that it had the potential to grow its U.S. e-commerce business tenfold to $17.5 billion this year.

TikTok isn’t the only platform on the list for merchants looking for more channels beyond Amazon to expand their customer bases. Its rise is part of a bigger shift we’ve been seeing around alternative marketplaces like Temu commanding more attention not just from shoppers, but also from Chinese e-commerce exporters and merchants. And Amazon is reportedly taking notice, another sign that alternatives are picking up traction.

TikTok did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

A new way to sell and buy

TikTok has been trying to boost its e-commerce business since the U.S. launch last September.

The app is famous — or infamous, depending on who you talk to — for how it tightly controls what content is surfaced for whom. TikTok Shop also has a strong dose of curation to it.

Unlike Temu, known for its seas of cheap, white-labeled products from Chinese factories sold directly to U.S. consumers, TikTok’s strategy has been to onboard and highlight more branded goods, making it more of a direct competitor to Amazon.

TikTok is also looking to attract sellers with more traditional subsidies. According to reports, to encourage merchants to sell goods at a steep discount during the most recent Black Friday sales period, TikTok doled out subsidies to those merchants to mark down their prices by as much as 50%.

Incentives and algorithms aside, merchants have been interested in selling on the app simply because TikTok’s short video platform generates massive engagement. According to a survey from Tabcut, a Chinese firm that tracks TikTok Shop performance, nearly 70% of sellers reported an increase in sales year-over-year for the first 11 months of 2023.

This is also borne out by consumer behavior, where products endorsed by influencers continue to gain ground, especially with coveted younger consumers.

According to Jungle Scout, nearly 20% of consumers began their search for products on TikTok in the first quarter of 2023, up 44% from a year ago. While 56% of all consumers still preferred to start their product search on Amazon, 40% of the Gen Z demographic preferred TikTok for search instead of Google.

The heavy concentration of young shoppers is unsurprising, given 52% of TikTok’s U.S. users are aged 18 to 34, according to Pew Research. TikTok has the opportunity to reshape how America’s younger generations shop online.

Outside of leaning on its dynamics, TikTok has been doing some pretty bald media spinning to push its message.

Earlier this month, the commercial research firm Oxford Economics published a report on the impact of TikTok on the small to medium-sized business (SMB) sector in the U.S. It was funded by TikTok, and perhaps unsurprisingly, it provided a ringing endorsement of TikTok’s economic impact: It estimated that a presence on the platform (through advertising or just marketing themselves via accounts) led to $14.7 billion in revenue for the 7 million SMBs in the U.S. using it.

Amazon challenger?

TikTok seems to be serious about making inroads into e-commerce, but it’s still in flux. On one hand, the company — even as it faces a potential U.S. ban or forced sale — continues to roll out new e-commerce features, such as a new video shopping format it previewed at a conference this month. On the other, it’s modifying or enforcing seller policies seemingly on the fly as it tries to navigate how to grow under a particularly glaring spotlight.

“TikTok [Shop]’s internal management is a bit chaotic right now. It’s a new platform, so it hasn’t started squeezing sellers, but its policies are still changing,” said a merchant selling lamps, who has been selling on Amazon since the mid-2010s.

One of those policies appears to be related to what its algorithms are surfacing to which consumers. Merchants out of China say that in recent months, TikTok Shop in the U.S. has ramped up efforts to prioritize U.S.-based shops over foreign ones. Sellers tell TechCrunch that it’s led to the rise of black market “agents” — parties that broker deals between foreign sellers and American residents, who in turn set up TikTok Shops that appear U.S.-owned but are really run by the foreign merchants.

Merchants are willing to jump through these hoops to grow their touch points with users, and diversifying their channels as one giant emerges after another.

“Margins on Amazon are getting thinner and competition is increasingly fierce because of Temu, so TikTok gives us another option,” said the lamp seller.

To gauge TikTok’s impact on Amazon, “we need to understand the overall retail market in the U.S.,” said Richard Xu, partner at Starting Gate Fund, who invests in cross-border retail solutions between China and the U.S.

E-commerce comprises around 15% of U.S. retail, according to the Department of Commerce, so “if we talk about the small share of the online e-commerce sector alone, there isn’t much to discuss,” suggested Xu.

But if TikTok Shop’s strategy is mainly focused on bringing offline businesses online for the first time, that could be a very big move. “[Using] live streaming e-commerce to allow offline small shops and stores to participate, the potential is quite significant.”

In any case, while 15% sounds small, the number is still substantial — $285.2 billion — so TikTok Shop’s potential is enormous even if it just gets a small slice of the existing e-commerce cake.

Juozas Kaziukenas, founder of e-commerce intelligence firm Marketplace Pulse, doubts TikTok will ever replace Amazon. “It doesn’t have the broad selection and fulfillment, and shoppers in the West are used to search-based e-commerce,” he said. “But many people spend many hours using TikTok every day, thus, sometimes they will buy things on it.”

“In the U.S. and other countries in the West, shopping apps developed in parallel with apps that provide entertainment or connection like social media. We got used to getting different things from different apps, as opposed to going to one place for it all,” he added.

“Today, social apps like TikTok are trying to figure out shopping before retailers like Amazon figure out social (like through Amazon Inspire). But the status quo of different apps serving different needs remains.”


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Meet Kidsy, a kids' clothing startup that sells what parents need at a discount | TechCrunch


All parents know that raising kids is expensive. Especially in those early years when they quickly outgrow clothes or toys, leaving parents on a never-ending cycle of buying new stuff when the old stuff is hardly worn or used.

Enter Kidsy, a new Chicago-based e-commerce startup that aims to give consumers greater access to discounted baby and kids products by partnering with large brands, retailers and liquidation companies for their overstock and returns inventory. At the same time, it says, it can help prevent overstock and liquidation items — such as kids’ clothing — from ending up in landfills, which is obviously not good for the environment.

Kidsy is not just focused on clothes. It also sells new and open-box (aka new but returned) items such as strollers, car seats, toys, travel gear, nursery furniture and “other baby essentials.”

The company’s founders are Indian-born former business journalist Shraysi Tandon and Turkish-born software engineer Sinan Sari, who also co-founded Y Combinator–backed SaaS startup Cuboh (a startup that was just sold to competitor ChowNow). The pair teamed up in April of 2022 to start the company, which recently closed what Tandon described as  an “oversubscribed” $1 million in pre-seed funding.

“Almost all the big retailers such as Amazon, Macy’s, Target, Kohl’s, Walmart, Bloomingdales don’t restock customer returns because it is too capital and labor intensive for them to do so,” Tandon, who serves as Kidsy’s CEO, told TechCrunch. “These items are then usually shipped to other countries who buy liquidated American merchandise or they are destroyed in landfills.”

Image Credits: Kidsy

Investors were drawn to the company’s early success. Since emerging from its beta phase in September 2023, Kidsy managed to hit $1 million in annualized revenue by January — just four months later, according to Tandon.

New York–based Impellent Ventures led Kidsy’s financing, which also included participation from Hustle Fund, Everywhere VC, The Fund Midwest and Responsibly Ventures. Angel investors also put money in the round, including Initialized partner and Rent the Runway co-founder Jenny Fleiss, DraftKings founder/CEO Jason Robins, ButcherBox founder Mike Salguero, Trucks VC managing partner Reilly Brennan and Kalibrr co-founder Sanuk Tandon.

Kids’ clothing: A massive market

Tandon’s road to founding Kidsy started when she founded her own media production company after working as a journalist for Bloomberg TV and ABC News. Through that company, she spent three years directing an award-winning feature documentary on child labor in global supply chains. During that time, she learned about the inventory glut that existed in the U.S. as well as “all the supply chain issues faced by retailers.”

She also learned that liquidation and returns is a $761 billion industry in the U.S. annually.

But it was when Tandon was pregnant with her first child that she decided to be a “smart” consumer and shop for liquidated baby products instead of paying full price. That’s when she noticed the gap in the market, asking herself, “Where is the TJ Maxx or Burlington for all the baby gear and kids items?”

While there are liquidation and overstock e-commerce companies galore, few specialize in just kids’ gear, or they are really more focused as a used-gear marketplace for parents.

While still pregnant, Tandon launched her company.

When she started fundraising as an expecting mother, Tandon said she was “nervous constantly reading statistics related to how difficult it was for female founders, the dominant ‘boys club’ that existed within the VC world and also how much harder it is in general for companies raising in 2024 compared to just two years prior.”

“I didn’t want to be a statistic, so I hid my pregnancy,” Tandon told TechCrunch.

She later decided she would “never do that again,” and now she tells VCs upfront that she’s a mom to a baby. VCs who think that’s a problem “aren’t the right investors for me,” she said.

Investors, Tandon said, grew excited to back a TJ Maxx for kids, noting that the retailer has outperformed the S&P 500 for the past 5 years and that the market for secondhand baby and kids products is expected to reach $12.8 billion by 2030.

“We get these items shipped directly to our warehouse in Nebraska, inspect them, grade them and then sell them, rather than on consignment or through a third-party logistics provider,” she said.

The majority of the products are brand-new and unused. About 10% are gently used, which Kidsy also sells.

Kidsy already has tens of thousands of customers, according to Tandon. The company gets a “take rate” on every item it sells. Its percentage varies across the brands and categories it sells, but on average it is 35%, according to Tandon.

Tandon is aware that there are plenty of competitors selling kids wares.

But investors like David Brown, managing partner of Impellent Ventures, believe Kidsy “is solving several very real pain points for parents and breathing innovation into a staid marketplace.”

“Yes, the offering is cheaper than others and has benefits for the environment, but it’s how they are leaning in to the parents’ evolving needs that has, and will continue to, set Kidsy apart.”

Kidsy plans to use its new capital for classic growth needs of hiring to expand its 12-person team, adding more partners. It also plans to embed artificial intelligence and machine learning into its offering “to increase operational efficiencies.”

For now, the startup is focused on the U.S. market, though Tandon believes that Kidsy could expand into any country that “has lenient retail returns policies and where brands are struggling to manage both their returns and their excess inventory.”


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Thrive Market's Nick Green talks building a billion-dollar grocery company | TechCrunch


Thrive Market is well, thriving. The billion-dollar e-commerce company splashed onto the scene in 2014 with its idea of online grocery delivery. The idea came way before buying food online was normalized during the pandemic, putting Thrive Market well ahead — and making it well equipped — to stand out among its peers. Nick Green, one of the company’s co-founders, stopped by Found to chat about his company and the market’s evolution since he first launched it.

“For conscious consumers that want to vote with their dollars and make good decisions for their family, for their health, and also for the planet, we’re ultimately trying to build a one-stop shop where you can get all your stuff on Thrive,” he told us.

Green spoke about how important founding a company like this is: The cost of healthy food has skyrocketed in the U.S., and to make matters worse, many families do not live in areas that give them access to healthy food at all. These areas are known as food deserts and have become an increasing problem in this country. This argument is what helped Thrive Market become the first online grocery retailer that the USDA approved to accept food stamps.

“That’s a huge watershed moment for people, the tens of millions of American families who use this as their form of shopping,” Green said. “The problem has been huge for a long time.”

Fundraising wasn’t easy for a company like this, however. Investors weren’t necessarily bullish on the idea of online groceries at the time, and the logistics of any food company are enough to scare away even the most storied check writers. Thrive Market had to raise money from content creators and influencers until VCs picked up on the craze. The company has since done more than $500 million in sales and has raised more than $200 million to date in fundraising.

Green also spoke about being a serial entrepreneur and what he carried with him from the first time he tried launching a business. He learned about having a co-founding team with diverse skill sets and the importance of having a business with a mission. He also briefly spoke about some of the social initiatives Thrive has and its impact arm, which has, to date, raised $13 million. The company also gives away free membership to low-income families so that they also can use the service.

“We feel like we’ve done a lot, but we’re really just getting started.”


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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