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Next-gen e-commerce startup Carted bags $13 million in seed funding, as co-founder Holly Cardew predicts the future of retail

Aussie startup Carted has secured a massive $13 million in seed funding, to build out its next-generation universal e-commerce API.
Carted Mike Angell and Holly Cardew
Carted co-founders Mike Angell and Holly Cardew. Source: supplied.

Aussie startup Carted has secured a massive $13 million in seed funding, to build out its next-generation universal e-commerce API. And these founders have global domination in their sights.

Carted was founded by Holly Cardew, who also founded image-editing-for-e-commerce startup Pixc; and Mike Angell, who has worked as an engineer at Shopify and was previously chief operating officer at Culture Kings.

These are founders with deep e-commerce experience, and an acute awareness of the challenges facing online retailers.

In March last year, Cardew and Angell started working together to build Vop, a tool making TikTok feeds โ€˜shoppableโ€™ for both brands and influencers.

But Vop was still redirecting users away from the content and to an online checkout. So the pair started working on building a multi-merchant checkout solution.

โ€œThen we realised we werenโ€™t the only ones who needed this,โ€ Cardew tells SmartCompany.

In November last year, Carted was born, with the co-founders starting to build what Cardew calls a โ€œuniversal commerce APIโ€, which will allow people to take an online community or content platform and effectively turn it into an online store.

And now, the recent $13 million funding round features an array of big-name Aussie investors. It was led by Aussie VC Blackbird Ventures, and also included Grok Ventures โ€” the investment firm of Mike and Annie Cannon-Brookes โ€” as well as Tidal Ventures.

US-based investors Streamlined Ventures and Lightspeed Ventures also took part, the latter through its angel scout fund.

They join an already impressive lineup of backers, including co-founder of Google Drive David Wurtz, Honey co-founder Ryan Hudson and TEN13, the investment syndicate of Aussie entrepreneur Steve Baxter.

Next-gen e-commerce

This funding news comes off the back of 12 months of wild growth in the e-commerce sector. The COVID-19 pandemic saw more people shopping online for the first time, and more businesses launching e-commerce strategies.

Thatโ€™s led to success for tech companies making online sales possible, and to those in the adjacent payments sector.

Cardew sees Carted as a representation of the next generation of e-commerce tech.

Consumers want to be able to purchase products where they see them, without the friction.

โ€œIf anything, weโ€™re still quite behind.โ€

Just this week, she was shopping for furniture online and wondering why she couldn’t speak to a sales rep via Zoom, she notes.

โ€œContextual shopping is going to be a bigger thing,โ€ she says.

But, equally, that should be accessible to all small businesses. Or anyone marketing any product, for that matter.

โ€œYou should be able to build your own commerce experience without having to build an integration with every brand or merchant or influencer.โ€

Building the future

It’s a significant chunk of capital for a seed funding round. But Cardew says it reflects the size of the opportunity here.

The founders have a lengthy waitlist of prospective customers already, she says, including Fortune 500 companies who want to use the technology.

The funding will allow the co-founders to be able to act on their vision and grow quickly โ€” something thatโ€™s crucial in the fast-moving e-commerce industry.

The product is US-focused at the moment, Cardew adds. But the vision has been global from day one. All of that takes people-power, money, and expert investors.

โ€œWhen you have millions of merchants and you power billions of products, itโ€™s not something that can be done over a couple of weekends with an engineer,โ€ she says.

This isnโ€™t Cardewโ€™s first rodeo, but sheโ€™s taking a different approach to growing Carted, compared to Pixc.

Pixc was bootstrapped for the most part, and is still growing organically.

But bootstrapping means the pace of growth is a little slower and more measured, because you have to work within the resources you have.

Taking on venture funding means โ€œwe can grow as fast as we wantโ€, she explains.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been told: โ€˜here are the resources, build what you think is the futureโ€™,โ€ she adds.

โ€œThatโ€™s super exciting.โ€