Rexby lets travel creators sell guides, run paid consultations, and lead group trips – monetizing the one thing algorithms can't replicate: earned trust.
ENTRY ANGLES
Curated commerce platforms leveraging individual influencer recommendations across verticals beyond travel · Dedicated platforms extracting influencer recommendations from social media feeds into standalone marketplaces · Category-specific curator networks (fashion, beauty, lifestyle) where buyers find trusted individual authorities
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Network effects: ability to attract and retain large networks of credible curators/influencers, Trust mechanisms: systems to establish and verify individual authority and expertise, Marketplace infrastructure: transaction and curation platform connecting buyers to recommendations
REXBY FOUNDER
“180 Routes Through the Italian Alps,”
Travel advice is one of the few categories where people still trust specific humans over algorithms – and Rexby is built entirely around that insight. The platform connects travelers with travel bloggers who serve not just as inspiration sources but as actual service providers: selling guides, running paid consultations, and leading group experiences.
There are three ways to engage with them.
First, buy a guide. Bloggers publish curated guides to specific destinations or travel styles – "Complete Guide to Thailand," "180 Routes Through the Italian Alps," "100 Best Photography Spots in Tokyo," and so on. Prices typically run €9 to €50.
Second, book a consultation. During a one-on-one session, you can ask a blogger about a specific destination, get feedback on an itinerary you've drafted, or have them build a custom itinerary and activity schedule based on your preferences. Rates typically range from €80/hour to €250 for thirty minutes; itinerary review runs €60–€150; custom itinerary creation starts at €70–€150 plus €5–€25 per day of travel.
Third, join a group experience. Bloggers lead small-group experiences in their home destinations, running two to twelve hours depending on the concept – a photography tour of Madeira, a culinary afternoon in Reykjavik, a road trip through Iceland. Prices range from €300 to €3,000.
Before committing, visitors can browse a blogger's profile, visit their social media channels, or chat with them directly through the platform.
Rexby graduated from the TechStars accelerator in 2021 – arguably the worst possible year to be building a travel startup. It survived anyway, and the platform has been active since. The company recently closed its first meaningful funding round at $2.4 million.
Social media has become the dominant source of travel inspiration. Surveys suggest it influences 75% of travel decisions, ahead of television, news, and film (64%) and personal recommendations from friends (47%).
The mechanism is almost amusingly direct: people want to post beautiful photos and videos from their trips, so they look to see who is already posting beautiful content and where it's coming from. Aspiration drives imitation.
Beyond aesthetics, travelers are increasingly trusting specific people – rather than generic travel guides – to tell them where to eat and what to do. The authority of the professional travel writer has been distributed across thousands of individual voices.
Rexby's thesis follows logically: online influencers are the new generation of travel advisors and, increasingly, tour operators.
As the startup puts it: "Already planning your travel with social media? Come to us – where you can easily get advice and plans from bloggers who actually know."
This trend has attracted several well-funded interpretations. Essentialist ([related review](/review/millionery-popali-v-dyru)) raised $10 million to build a private members' travel club where members connect with journalists and bloggers to create personalized itineraries and handle all bookings. At $2,600 per year for membership, the positioning is deliberately exclusive.
Unravel ([related review](/review/a-prodavat-jeto-nuzhno-ne-tak-kak-vy-dumali)) built what could be described as a TikTok for travel – a short-video feed where partner creators showcase destinations with a "book this" button built directly into each clip. Creators earn commission on every booking. The company recently raised $7 million after pivoting to a B2B licensing model, embedding its booking engine inside banks, airlines, and telecoms that want to sell travel to their existing customers.
TrovaTrip ([related review](/review/vlijatelnye-puteshestvenniki)) took $20 million to build a tour operator that designs group trips specifically for creators to lead – then fills remaining spots with individual travelers sourced independently.
Social media's influence extends well beyond travel. Studies suggest it now shapes 70–93% of all purchase decisions. 76% of consumers have bought something they saw on social media; 54% use it for product research; 42% purchase directly through social platforms. The younger the buyer, the stronger the effect – among Gen Z, social media influences 85% of purchases.
But the real insight isn't about social media specifically – it's that 88% of people trust recommendations from individuals over advertising and mass-market messaging. Social media is just the delivery mechanism.
Which means the recommendations work even when lifted off social media entirely. That's exactly the bet Rexby is making: that people will seek out blogger recommendations on a dedicated platform rather than scroll through feeds to find them.
The same principle – what might be called "curated commerce" – has driven significant investment in adjacent categories. ShopMy ([related review](/review/samyj-jeffektivnyj-marketing-ne-vygljadit-kak-marketing)) raised $70 million at a $1.5 billion valuation this October, building a fashion and beauty marketplace where shoppers browse recommendations from a network of over 185,000 curators – bloggers, podcasters, designers, makeup artists, and other credible voices. At that scale, virtually any buyer can find someone whose taste they trust.
The broader opportunity: curated-commerce platforms across any category where individual authority and expertise drive purchasing decisions.
The build pattern: identify a category where individual reputation genuinely moves purchasing decisions – fitness, home renovation, personal finance, B2B software – and build the infrastructure that lets those trusted voices monetize their recommendations directly. Verification and curator compensation are the hard problems; get those right and the supply side builds itself.