Zimi is building the infrastructure layer for a $9T cross-border e-commerce market where delivery still takes weeks and customs is still manual.
ENTRY ANGLES
Dedicated warehousing and logistics infrastructure for underserved cross-border corridors · Customs knowledge and local seller onboarding as a service · Trusted warehouse relationships as a defensibility moat in emerging corridors
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Customs compliance and regulatory expertise, Warehouse operations and local partnerships, Seller onboarding and support infrastructure
Ordering anything from anywhere online sounds simple in theory. In practice, international retail shipping is a hassle – for buyers and sellers alike.
- Shipping costs from overseas can exceed the price of the item itself. - Delivery can take two weeks or more, and sellers have to track packages across multiple carriers and customs systems just to give buyers a status update. - Buyers may need to file customs paperwork on their end. - Returns become a logistical nightmare and a prohibitive expense.
Zimi was built to fix this for international retail. For now, the platform focuses specifically on cross-border sales into the US.
The pitch is straightforward: Zimi handles delivery and returns, processes buyer payments in USD, and deposits funds – in dollars or local currency – into the seller's account. It also offers tools for forecasting demand and inventory across international markets.
The mechanics work like this. A seller connects their online store to Zimi and designates which products they want to make available. They then ship a batch of those products to Zimi's US warehouse – using whatever slow, cheap method they prefer (sea freight, consolidated container shipments shared with other sellers from the same country). When a US order comes in for a product that's already in Zimi's warehouse, the platform intercepts it and ships from stock, typically delivering within 2.5 days.
On the payments side, Zimi opens a US account for the seller after verifying their business documents. When a sale goes through, Zimi routes payment via a US payment processor in compliance with local regulations, deducts applicable taxes and its own fees, and deposits the remainder into the seller's US account. Sellers can then transfer funds to their local account as needed.
Zimi offers pre-built integrations with Amazon, Shopify, Etsy, WooCommerce, Wix, and other major platforms to intercept orders automatically. Sellers get a dashboard showing orders, fulfillment status, and warehouse inventory. Customs documentation for new shipments and direct access to a Zimi account manager are also part of the package.
The results so far are striking. Sellers using Zimi have cut US shipping costs by 80% and reduced delivery time to 2.5 days from order to door. That combination drove a 20% average revenue increase from US orders. One early seller reportedly moved $25,000 of inventory within 48 hours of announcing a 65% cost reduction and faster delivery.
Zimi's current go-to-market focuses on sellers from India and Nigeria, and the company went through Y Combinator, where it raised an initial $500,000. Shortly after graduating, it closed a $2 million seed round.
Cross-border retail e-commerce is already a trillion-dollar market, and the forecasts range from conservative to startling. Even the cautious analysts project growth to $3 trillion by 2028; the optimists model $9 trillion by 2032 at 25% annual growth. Either way, the opportunity is enormous.
The market has already attracted capital. OpenBorder, [covered here](/review/pljus-35-vyruchki-za-150-minut), raised $10 million in its first round on a similar premise. Both Zimi and OpenBorder target small and mid-sized sellers, and both cite average revenue uplifts of 20%, with some sellers hitting 35%.
The most active cross-border trade corridors tell you where the opportunities cluster:
- The US and Canada, buying from China and Europe. - The UK, Germany, and France, buying from the US and Asia. - China, Japan, and South Korea, buying from the US and Europe. - Brazil and Mexico, buying from the US and China. - Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Nigeria, buying from China, the US, and Europe.
But markets that don't appear on the top-corridor list aren't dead ends – they're just underpenetrated. The biggest absolute growth usually comes from the lowest starting base. Which is exactly what Zimi is betting on by focusing on Indian and Nigerian sellers accessing the US market.
The broad direction here is obvious: cross-border retail e-commerce.
For local manufacturers and sellers, activating international sales can add 20–35% to revenue – especially if the infrastructure problem is already solved by platforms like Zimi or OpenBorder.
For builders, the most defensible entry isn't the busiest corridor – it's the corridor where infrastructure gaps create the biggest pain differential for sellers. The US–India and US–Nigeria corridors that Zimi is targeting illustrate the logic: low existing infrastructure, high growth in export-capable manufacturers, and a large enough US buyer base to justify dedicated warehousing. The constraint is customs knowledge and local seller onboarding; the moat is the trusted warehouse relationship on both ends.