Kids' Hand-Me-Downs Now Big Internet Business

slfisher 0 Tallied Votes 304 Views Share

You've been able to use the Internet to swap books, CDs, and DVDs. Now -- kids' clothes?

ThredUP offers a standard form factor for exchanging kids' clothes -- a UPS flat-rate box, packed full of clothes for a girl or a boy, of a certain size, for a certain season, and the clothes can either be tops, bottoms, or mixed. People select a box, pay $13 to have it shipped to them, then pack one of their own and list it for selection by someone else. (The company makes $1.50 on each box.)

But this isn't just an easy way to avoid going to garage sales. ThredUP was named one of five Boston-based startups to watch by Techland earlier this week, and received $1.4 million from four early-stage investors, including Founder Collective of Cambridge and New York, Trinity Ventures of Menlo Park, Calif., High Line Venture Partners and Nextview Ventures, according to Mass High Tech, which also reported this week that the company was moving from Cambridge, Mass., to California.

The site launched in April and now has 15,000 users, with 1,000 new ones signing up each week, reported the Associated Press. Thus far, it has shipped 3,000 boxes of clothes and has 1,500 listed, according to the Boston Globe. Initially, it was set up for adults, but shifted its focus to kids. It was also featured this month in Redbook, and is also starting to make the rounds of the Mommy blogs.

Member Avatar for LastMitch
LastMitch

Kids' Hand-Me-Downs Now Big Internet Business

It's a nice article to promote ThredUP. It's kind alike a online mini-Ebay that sells kids clothes.

I read some good and bad review how the companies operates.

noormahal 0 Newbie Poster

For kids it is a nice site. Parents will get every thing for their children from one site.

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