Croissant offers shoppers a locked-in buyback price at checkout, reducing return friction and lifting e-commerce conversion rates – funded before any at-scale results arrived.
ENTRY ANGLES
Vertical-specific return management platform (electronics, sporting goods, luxury goods, children's products) · AI-based pricing engine for category-specific depreciation curves · Direct retailer partnerships for exclusive secondhand supply channels
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI-based pricing and depreciation modeling, Retail partnership and integration capability, Secondhand/resale market logistics and fulfillment
Croissant launched with $24M and a product still in MVP testing – an unusual ratio that signals investors saw something in the business model before any at-scale results came in.
The core mechanic: when a shopper is about to check out at a participating e-commerce store, Croissant displays a guaranteed buyback price for the item they're purchasing. That price is locked in for a year. If the customer later decides they no longer want the product, they can sell it back to Croissant at the guaranteed price rather than listing it on a resale marketplace themselves.
This addresses two persistent problems simultaneously. The first is cart abandonment at the point of final decision. Shoppers hesitate because buying feels irreversible. When they can see that a $200 jacket has a guaranteed $120 buyback, the downside of the purchase shrinks, and conversion improves. Stores plugging in Croissant report higher conversion rates and larger average orders.
The second problem is returns. Online shoppers return roughly 20% of purchases and around 30% during peak sale periods – meaning up to a fifth of all e-commerce volume flows back through retailer logistics as return freight, reprocessing, and restocking. Croissant absorbs that friction: instead of returning an item to the store, the customer ships it to Croissant.
When a customer decides to sell, they have two options: cash to their account, or a slightly higher credit toward a future purchase at the same store. A notable portion of customers choose the store credit option, which effectively creates a repurchase loop that benefits the retailer.
Croissant prices buybacks using AI that synthesizes resale market data, estimates product similarity when exact matches aren't available, and models the depreciation curves for each product category. Prices update continuously as new market data comes in and as the model learns from actual resale transactions. Croissant then sells the acquired inventory through established secondhand marketplaces.
On the revenue side, Croissant can earn both a commission from retailers for taking returns off their hands, and a margin on the spread between buyback prices and resale prices.
Integration is lightweight: sync the product catalog, drop in a widget, and done.
Croissant started as a consumer lending product – a buy-now-pay-later variant. The founders scrapped that and pivoted to guaranteed buyback when they realized both approaches target the same retailer goal (higher conversion) but the buyback model is structurally more interesting.
The secondhand goods market is large and accelerating. The apparel resale segment alone was $138B in 2021, reached $211B in 2023, and is projected to hit $351B by 2027. But standard resale marketplaces – ThredUp, Poshmark, eBay, and their equivalents – have to acquire both sides of the market continuously. Every seller and every buyer requires ongoing acquisition spend.
Croissant's insight is that e-commerce returns are a pre-existing, self-replenishing supply channel. Signing up a retailer once unlocks a stream of inventory that grows automatically with that retailer's sales volume. Croissant doesn't pay to find sellers – they arrive through the buyback widget. And Croissant doesn't need to build its own buyer marketplace immediately – it routes inventory through existing platforms.
At 20% returns across e-commerce broadly, the potential supply channel is immense: roughly a fifth of all online retail volume. A platform that captures even a fraction of that flow at improving margins has a credible path to eventually launching its own resale marketplace, where inventory scale is the primary competitive advantage. Scale of supply is what attracts buyers; buyers are what attract more retail partners; retail partners generate more supply.
The three-sided value proposition here is unusually clean. Retailers get higher conversion and fewer returns to manage. Customers get a psychological safety net that makes buying easier. Croissant gets a low-cost, scalable supply channel into the growing secondhand market.
For builders, the model is replicable by category. Croissant is starting with general merchandise, but a vertical-specific version – electronics, sporting goods, luxury goods, children's products – could build deeper pricing accuracy and stronger retailer relationships within a single category before expanding. Electronics in particular have well-documented depreciation curves and active resale markets, which makes AI-based pricing more reliable from day one.
The window for building a competing platform is real but not indefinite. As Croissant and any copycats sign exclusive or semi-exclusive relationships with major retailers, the available retailer base for new entrants narrows. The supply channel is the moat – and the moat gets deeper with every additional retail integration.