Who owns storenvy




















There are no companies similar to Storenvy. View All. David Cancel. David Cohen. David Hauser. First Round Capital. No investment has been recorded for Storenvy.

No press releases have been recorded for Storenvy. No producer has been recorded for Storenvy. No discussions has been recorded for Storenvy.

No company initiative has been recorded for Storenvy. No industry vertical has been recorded for Storenvy. Mobile Advertising. Storenvy offers a way to shop over 30, creative businesses, and an easy way to open online stores. The Storenvy Marketplace lets shoppers discover and buy products from creative businesses around the world by connecting with friends and influencers.

With Storenvy Stores, merchants can create a customizable online storefront in minutes. Running a Storenvy store is free, with no set-up fees, monthly fees or listing fees. The company will soon introduce a commission fee for sales made through the marketplace, though sales through a merchant's storefront will remain free. May 7th, StorEnvy database has been dumped on a hacker forum for free download. The popular e-commerce website StorEnvy known for its online store building and social marketplace has been hacked.

As a result, personal details of over 1. Launched in ; the St. According to the database seen by Hackread. In some cases, order details like date of order, order number, and payment method used in the purchase can also be seen.

However, apparently, shipping addresses or payment card data is not in the database. Sample data being traded on a hacker forum Image: Hackread. A screenshot sent by one of the affected customers to Hackread. And we just put the hottest stuff on the home page so those are the things that are more likely to have activity on them. It takes a little time to build up, and then before you know it, it becomes this avalanche. Andrew : How long did it go from launch to impact?

We have not seen the fruition of what Storenvy is going to be. Andrew : How many stores do you have now? Jon : We have 2, stores right now. Social helped you get there. What kind of social was at play there? What kind of social takes you from to 2, stores? Jon : Well, we have a free Facebook application that merchants can stick on their Facebook pages.

So, that has helped big time. Facebook is our biggest single traffic source, people sharing out things to other social networks.

So much of it is exactly what everyone should be doing, like showing people their friends that have already joined, their Facebook friends that have already joined. Andrew : So, tell me. What do you mean by the marketplace, and how did that help you go from to 2,? Jon : The marketplace is the ability to search across all the stores at once.

A person can show up o Storenvy and shop, unlike some of our competitors out there for setting up an online store. Andrew : But how does a user go from one store on your site to another? How does he discover that?

And so, those things you click on it. Then, when you click on that, you see other products from other stores that are similar. If you hop in just directly to a store, when you add something to your cart and you start to check out, it suggests things from other stores that are similar to the things you have in your cart.

You can search a keyword and see all the products across all the stores that match that keyword and buy it. It removes some of that marketing difficulty for merchants. Andrew : How do you convert someone who just created a store for free into a paying printing customer of yours?

Andrew : Right. But the way it did work was we just had our own ads everywhere for merchants. Look here. It was always like, every sticker, everything we handed out, it was free online stores and t-shirt printing.

It was both things at the same time. Were you competing with the CafePresses of the world and the Zazzles of the world who were doing custom printing in giving users their own stores? Jon : A little bit. Our take is that the Storenvy services were a lot more high end. It would wash off. We offer high quality screen printing. And so, we had minimums. Andrew : So, I see. I get it. Customer support for that is tough.

Jon : Peek-a-boo. Jon : Nice. Andrew : So, what about the design? Jon : Well, I kind of had a design background.

And so, when we set out to build this, we really wanted it to be the best design eCommerce platform. And we wanted it to be fun and bright. And so, we wanted it to be fun and light-hearted, and I think that comes across. Well, we were just web designers. So, they were trying to. A lot of people need eCommerce. A lot of people need t-shirt printing. We found our early, early niche in just youth oriented groups, so like bands, t-shirt companies that were selling at concerts.

And so, we really cater to them, first and foremost. What else? What else did you do to bring in new store owners because it feels to me like what you did was you created a system where anyone could set up a store, and the revenue for you is going to come from selling the printing?

And it kind of feeds off itself because each store is a potential lure for another store owner, and each store owner is a potential customer for the printing business, and it all grows.

How do I get more into that machine? How do I get more out of that machine? So, what do you do to bring in more store owners? I talk to a lot of people. You and I just happened to talk earlier this week. We were introduced through David Hauser of Grasshopper, so I knew that you were a guy who was further along than most people. So, how did you even get to 2,? Well, let me clarify that. I cannot believe that there are 2, people who have chosen to run their business off this thing that I came up with.

Jon : It very well might, 1, right now. I wish I was doing these interviews live so that someone in the audience can go on and create a store. Jon : When I started, it was at 1, How about the first 1,? How do you get to 1,? That must have been an exciting time when you saw the numbers go from three digits to four digits. Andrew : How do you get to that? Andrew : But you know what? What else did you do? Did you buy any ads online? Did you send out emails?

Did you spam? Jon : We gave out lots of shirts at conferences. We tried Google AdWords for a week, and it was so expensive that it was just not worth it. Andrew : How do you get that good store? I think members in our community would like that, but I should have done more targeting influencers and saying, okay, like what you were just saying.

So, one of our best sellers right now is a t-shirt by New Toy who are the makers of Words with Friends for the iPhone. Andrew : Oh, I see. I got that. T-shirts, giving those out at conferences. Did that work for you guys?

So, I personally am a little bit burned on conference promotion. Tech conference people can build their own online store, and they probably know enough about the web to be really, really opinionated. But we have done that, and people send us pictures wearing our shirts and all kinds of stuff. Andrew : What about the time and the effort that it takes to set up a new store? Andrew : How fast?

Jon : Well, your store is created in 30 seconds. So, you just give me a sub-domain, the name of your store and your PayPal account, and you have a store. Andrew : And I need to give you my PayPal account so that you can give me money, not to take money from me. Yeah, yeah.

Now, it all depends on how many products you have and how crazy you want to get with your designs. But if you want to get going. Jon : Oh, shoot. Jon : Yeah, man. Andrew : Did somebody else become 2,? Jon : No, 1, I was talking while typing.

Jon : Watch it totally bomb. Andrew : Live, right here on Mixergy. Jon : Breaking news. Andrew : There you go. I can see you find your friends. Ah, interesting. Link your account with Facebook and Twitter to find friends who are on Storenvy, fill out a profile market. But the one little bubble that you isolate for me is create your store.

Jon : Boom, this is perfect. Andrew : Here goes. Hey, what about the name, Storenvy? Is that an issue for you guys that people will spell out the word envy instead of N-V-Y.

Jon : It is to a certain extent. But we have both domains, so it just redirects. So, if I tell people I have a store at Mixergy. At what point in this process am I going to get a solicitation to sign up? Jon : A solicitation to sign up? Andrew : A solicitation for printing? Yeah, Yeah. Jon : So, side note, when you create your store, it validates your PayPal email address, and PayPal has been totally freaking out and tweeting about it all day. So, can I do it without PayPal?

Jon : No. I wonder if I already have a store. Let me see. No, Mixergy gives me an application error. Jon : Well, your store got created. I think maybe PayPal is just bombing out. Check your email. Andrew : Oh, yes. I see it now. So, now I am officially the 2,th store owner of Storenvy. Jon : Wait, wait, not yet, not yet. We actually have. We actually have 6, stores, but only 2, are open and launched. So, now how do I launch this thing?

Jon : So, check your email. Now, you go to mixergy. I clicked on send and receive my mail. David Hauser, I know, has founded several companies. The most famous one is Grasshopper.

He apparently has been helping you. What kind of help has he been giving you? Jon : Well, he helped first push me towards doing this business like a real Internet startup. Let me put it that way. I was just trying to keep up with all that stuff. It was like he pushed me down a little crazy slide. So, he gave us the initial nudge.



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