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Founded Year

2009

Stage

Private Equity | Alive

Total Raised

$748.39M

Revenue

$0000 

Mosaic Score
The Mosaic Score is an algorithm that measures the overall financial health and market potential of private companies.

+39 points in the past 30 days

About Vestiaire Collective

Vestiaire Collective develops an online marketplace for buying and selling second-hand luxury fashion items, emphasizing sustainability. The company serves fashion-conscious consumers looking for clothing options. It primarily serves the electronic commerce sector. Vestiaire Collective was formerly known as Vestiaire de Copines. It was founded in 2009 and is based in Paris, France.

Headquarters Location

53, Rue de Châteaudun

Paris, 75009,

France

+33 811032018

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ESPs containing Vestiaire Collective

The ESP matrix leverages data and analyst insight to identify and rank leading companies in a given technology landscape.

EXECUTION STRENGTH ➡MARKET STRENGTH ➡LEADERHIGHFLIEROUTPERFORMERCHALLENGER
Consumer & Retail / Fashion Tech

The peer-to-peer fashion resale marketplace market offers a dynamic platform for individuals to buy and sell pre-owned fashion items directly. These marketplaces provide an eco-friendly and cost-effective way for consumers to extend the lifecycle of their clothing and accessories. The market facilitates direct interactions between buyers and sellers, fostering a sense of community and trust. Busin…

Vestiaire Collective named as Leader among 15 other companies, including eBay, Mercari, and Carousell.

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Research containing Vestiaire Collective

Get data-driven expert analysis from the CB Insights Intelligence Unit.

CB Insights Intelligence Analysts have mentioned Vestiaire Collective in 1 CB Insights research brief, most recently on May 2, 2022.

Expert Collections containing Vestiaire Collective

Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.

Vestiaire Collective is included in 5 Expert Collections, including E-Commerce.

E

E-Commerce

11,142 items

Companies that sell goods online (B2C), or enable the selling of goods online via tech solutions (B2B).

U

Unicorns- Billion Dollar Startups

1,258 items

L

Luxury Tech

419 items

Tech-enabled companies launching new luxury brands, as well as startups providing tech solutions to the luxury industry, including e-commerce tools, marketing, and more. While these companies may not exclusively target luxury companies, they have notable luxury partners.

a

a16z Marketplace 100

200 items

The a16z Marketplace 100 is a ranking of the largest consumer-facing marketplace startups and private companies created by venture firm, Andreessen Horowitz.

T

Tech IPO Pipeline

257 items

The tech companies we think could hit the public markets next, according to CB Insights data.

Latest Vestiaire Collective News

Decoding Fashion and Retail Priorities With BoF and Shopify

Jan 27, 2025

Executives and technology leaders from luxury and fashion brands including Kering, Hermès, Gucci, Fendi, Nordstrom, Tapestry, Savage x Fenty, Versace and Value Retail, among others, joined BoF and Shopify for dinner in New York City. Guests attend the BoF x Shopify executive dinner. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) By In Partnership With As the National Retail Federation’s annual conference again took over New York’s Javits Center, BoF and Shopify joined forces to unite executives and tech leaders from across the fashion, beauty and luxury industries for an intimate dinner in the city. Held on the rooftop of Nine Orchard, the event encouraged meaningful connection and discussion regarding the challenges and opportunities facing fashion and beauty in 2025. To support this, BoF’s chief growth officer and head of BoF Insights, Rahul Malik, and BoF’s director of content strategy, Alice Gividen, shared key insights from BoF’s State of Fashion 2025 report with attendees, providing exclusive context and recommendations around the report’s major themes. It’s a timely discussion. As we step into 2025, the industry can anticipate challenges at every turn. Consumers , scarred by the recent period of high inflation, are increasingly price sensitive. Indeed, for the first time since 2016 (excluding 2020), luxury value creation declined . However, opportunities to provide value for customers exist, with personalisation emerging as a critical growth lever. “Delivering true personalisation, at scale, has been a goal for retailers for a long time, but over-reliance on low-quality, third-party data, misreading consumer behaviour shifts, and tech applications that don’t speak to each other have gotten in the way,” said Shopify’s field chief technology officer, lifestyle, Eduardo Frias. “Creating a fair value exchange between retailer and consumer unlocks the sharing of personal information and thus, access to first-party data — the key behind seamless, relevant personalisation.” Indeed, Shopify — which holds more than ten percent of global e-commerce market share — works to facilitate a fully integrated retail system it calls unified commerce, that allows merchants to run their businesses from one place. “We believe the greatest opportunity for retailers is to double-down on achieving a true unified commerce experience, one that gives a brand a full understanding of its customers,” he added. “Enabling connected, seamless, and personalised customer experiences, regardless of where they shop — be that online, in stores or on social — is what allows retailers to achieve true differentiation.” Below, BoF shares reflections and insights from the executives that attended. BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner From left to right: Samina Virk CEO of North America at Vestiaire Collective; Shira Carmi, CEO at Altuzarra; and Johanna Layolle, chief business officer at The Business of Fashion. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) Rema Morgan Aluko, Senior Vice President of Technology, Savage x Fenty ‘Personalisation is important because one of our main tenets is inclusivity. Everybody should feel like they’re a part of the brand' “In terms of experiences, people are looking for some sort of value — a lot of these things are commodities and you can find them anywhere. So, what is special about your brand and does that special sauce show up in store? Does it show up in e-commerce? Do we know who you are? Do we localise your experiences depending on where you are? There are things that you may want or things that are custom or important to people who live in Detroit, versus people who live in Miami. So, how are we actually tuning into our customers’ needs and being there no matter where they are? Personalisation is very important because one of our main tenets is inclusivity. It’s very important to make sure that everybody feels that they’re a part of the brand. And we need to make sure that we understand who they are — because they’re coming to us for a reason. They’re coming to us because they have some sort of affinity to our brand or to our founder, and they align with us. And so we should know a little bit about them too.” Juliette Arnaud, Senior Director of Commerce Systems, Hermès ‘There are so many people preparing decks and preparing data and preparing reports. Those people could spend so much less time if people trusted in AI data’ “I am always looking to shave the bottom line and look at the most efficient way of doing things. I think people are starting to get less scared of AI, and I think we should trust AI more with data, with reporting, and that will save so much time. There are so many people preparing decks and preparing data and preparing reports. Those people could spend so much less time if people trusted in AI data. There are ways of personalising your AI with generative AI that’s built into your system — which is smart. The more you talk to it, the more it talks back to you. If we don’t get on the AI boat now, you’re going to be a late adopter and no one wants to be a late adopter. There are so many agencies that can help you with that, and the investment required is not that big, but the difference it can make is huge.” 0 of 10 BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Rema Morgan-Aluko, SVP of technology at Savage x Fenty. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Eduardo Frias, field CTO, lifestyle at Shopify. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Stacie Capece Minutolo, CMO of Americas at Tod’s Group and Johanna Layolle, chief business officer at The Business of Fashion. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Shira Carmi, CEO at Altuzarra and Karis Durmer, president of Americas at Versace. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Samina Virk, CEO of North America at Vestiaire Collective and Sabina Lazarz-Daniels, head of Americas digital business at Gucci. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Michele Azar, chief product officer at Gap Inc. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Katie Winterbottom, director of data science and analytics at Nordstrom and Meagan Colbenson, VP of technology at Nordstrom. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Doug Jensen, SVP of global data and analytics at Estée Lauder. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Juliette Arnaud, senior director of commerce systems at Hermès. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Alice Gividen, director of content strategy at The Business of Fashion and Rahul Malik, chief growth officer at The Business of Fashion. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) Megan Colbenson, Vice President, Technology, Nordstrom ‘New features or new experiences cannot come at the expense of our long-term customers’ expectations' “For our year ahead, we believe growth will come for exploring how we amplify how our employees show up and deliver best-in-class customers service — and using technology to help make that process even easier and amplify that human connection. In 2025, omnichannel shopping is a significant focus for us. We are exploring RFID technology to build connected products and work on inventory integrity. Our priority is to focus on how we continue to make the store a part of that omnichannel customer journey in a really seamless way— all those operational unsexy logistics that go into like that really great customer experience. In recent years, Nordstrom has been working to try and drive down their customer age — but we know that, in 2025, our older, core customers are super valuable thanks to their loyalty and discretionary income. From a tech perspective, we need to ensure that rolling out new features or new experiences doesn’t come at the expense of our long term customers’ expectations in both service and product mix.” Regis Litre, Chief Information Officer, Rag & Bone ‘Shipping internationally, we can see where appetite exists for the brand and double down where the brand is strong and awareness is high’ “For more than 20 years, we’ve built Rag & Bone as a quintessential New York brand, prioritising our store network and operations in the US. But, our acquisition in 2024 by Guess Inc. and brand management firm WHP Global has given us cause to expand our operations this year in both Europe and Asia. It’s a fortunate position while the slowdown in China is impacting growth plans across the industry. In identifying growth markets, we’ve been shipping internationally for a couple of years and can use that to see where appetite exists for the brand, and then double down on those spaces where the brand is strong and awareness is high. One huge growth driver in 2024 was a hero product of ours — the Miramar jeans. These were launched post-pandemic, where we saw a real casualisation of dressing. Organic social content has driven brand awareness for us hugely, and the jeans have broadened our generational appeal, opening up Rag & Bone to both younger and older cohorts.” BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Doug Jensen, Beauty Industry Executive and Sarah Amos, Director of Product Management, Nordstrom (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) Doug Jenson, Beauty Industry Executive ‘The next step is implementing the technology that allows you to do the segmentation and the customisation — personalisation at scale' “Doubling down on retention and making sure that we have a good experience for the consumers is business critical, particularly as acquiring new customers is 7 to 9 times more expensive than retaining existing ones. This is unlikely to change in the near future so the focus for all brands should absolutely be on retention. There is a science related to doing good retention marketing and it’s essentially understanding what the natural purchase journey is — it’s effectively a replenishment pathway. We need to think about marketing that speaks to that lifecycle journey, rather than blasting them with emails of everything that you have to offer. We need to relish the fact that they bought that one product and educate them about the usage of that product and then cultivate a long-lasting relationship. Most big companies have had to invest in consumer data platforms to harmonise the first party data that they have. The next step is getting the marketing automation technology that allows you to do the segmentation and the customisation — personalisation at scale. To do this, brands need to tear down the silos of brick-and-mortar versus online to become effective.” BoF x Shopify - Executive Dinner Alice Gividen, director of content strategy at The Business of Fashion and Rahul Malik, chief growth officer at The Business of Fashion. (Sabrina Steck/BFA.com/Sabrina Steck/BFA.com) This is a sponsored feature paid for by Shopify as part of a BoF partnership. See all comments

Jan 8, 2025
☕ Boxed in

Vestiaire Collective Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

  • When was Vestiaire Collective founded?

    Vestiaire Collective was founded in 2009.

  • Where is Vestiaire Collective's headquarters?

    Vestiaire Collective's headquarters is located at 53, Rue de Châteaudun, Paris.

  • What is Vestiaire Collective's latest funding round?

    Vestiaire Collective's latest funding round is Private Equity.

  • How much did Vestiaire Collective raise?

    Vestiaire Collective raised a total of $748.39M.

  • Who are the investors of Vestiaire Collective?

    Investors of Vestiaire Collective include Eurazeo, Leading European Tech Scaleups, Crowdcube, Societe Generale, Bank of America and 22 more.

  • Who are Vestiaire Collective's competitors?

    Competitors of Vestiaire Collective include GoThrift, Farfetch, Push Marketplace, Popshop Live, Poshmark and 7 more.

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Compare Vestiaire Collective to Competitors

Vinted Logo
Vinted

Vinted serves as an online marketplace that focuses on second-hand fashion and lifestyle items within the e-commerce sector. The company enables individuals to buy and sell pre-owned clothing, accessories, and other lifestyle products, facilitating a sustainable cycle of fashion reuse. It was founded in 2008 and is based in Vilnius, Lithuania.

LePrix Logo
LePrix

LePrix is a B2B platform for wholesale sourcing of pre-owned luxury goods in the luxury resale industry. The company operates a marketplace for authenticated, pre-owned luxury items, granting businesses access to inventory from global suppliers. LePrix provides services such as fulfillment, data analytics, and authenticity verification to support enterprise accounts. LePrix was formerly known as SnobSwap. It was founded in 2013 and is based in Arlington, Virginia.

Clothing Swap Logo
Clothing Swap

Clothing Swap focuses on fashion through organized events in the philanthropy sector. It offers a platform for individuals to exchange clothes, shoes, and accessories in a social setting, while also providing spa treatments and supporting local charities with unclaimed items. The company primarily serves the eco-conscious consumer market and those interested in fashion and philanthropy. Clothing Swap was founded in 1995 and is based in San Francisco, California.

Rebag Logo
Rebag

Rebag is an e-commerce company that specializes in the resale of luxury goods within the secondary market. The company offers a platform for buying and selling designer handbags, watches, jewelry, and accessories, providing upfront payment and a streamlined resale experience. Rebag primarily serves consumers interested in sustainable and affordable luxury ownership. Rebag was formerly known as Rebagg. It was founded in 2014 and is based in New York, New York.

Shop-Hers Logo
Shop-Hers

Shop-Hers is a company focused on the fashion industry, specifically in the domain of second-hand luxury items. The company offers a platform for buying and selling pre-loved designer fashion items, including clothing, shoes, bags, accessories, and vintage pieces. It primarily serves the ecommerce industry. It is based in Santa Monica, California.

Vaunte Logo
Vaunte

Vaunte is an online hub that focuses on fashion, beauty, health, and fitness. It provides the latest news, tips, and insights across these domains, catering to individuals seeking guidance and information on style, self-care, well-being, and personal improvement. Its content spans a variety of topics, including lifestyle, home and garden, and travel, and offers a resource for readers. It was founded in 2012 and is based in Grandville, Michigan.

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