Matchory tracks the global supplier landscape continuously — so manufacturers always have access to better terms, not just when a crisis forces it.
ENTRY ANGLES
Build verified supplier databases targeting specific countries/regions with managed service layer · Provide full-service market entry support (regulatory docs, marketing materials, ongoing reporting) · Commission-based model for completed transactions rather than subscription/database access
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Regulatory documentation and compliance expertise for cross-border transactions, Managed service delivery and supplier relationship management, Deal execution and transaction facilitation capabilities
For most manufacturers, supplier selection is a decision made once and then forgotten – until something breaks. Matchory is built on the premise that this is exactly backwards.
The startup's core argument is that supplier selection shouldn't be a one-time decision, or something you revisit only when an existing supplier creates problems. It should be a continuous process, so you always have access to the best available terms and your supply strategy stays aligned with your broader business direction.
The platform covers three stages of procurement. Discovery: search for suppliers anywhere globally using AI-powered sourcing. Analysis: compare shortlisted companies across financials, certifications, technology stack, and existing customer relationships. Engagement: manage ongoing supplier relationships as discrete projects, with all communication in one place.
Beyond sourcing, the platform enables ongoing monitoring – surfacing new suppliers who may offer better pricing or more advanced production capabilities. That intelligence has value in two ways: either you act on it and switch, or you use it as leverage to renegotiate better terms with your current supplier.
Technology matters as much as price when evaluating suppliers. It's a proxy for output quality and a signal about long-term compatibility – aligning your own technology roadmap with suppliers who are moving in the same direction reduces the risk of being stranded.
Risk management is another core layer. The platform assesses financial health, client concentration, certifications, and compliance indicators for each supplier. And beyond individual risk, there's geopolitical risk: Matchory supports building a geographically diversified supplier base so that supply continuity isn't dependent on any single region.
The platform covers 14 million suppliers across all major product categories – a footprint Matchory claims covers 98% of the global supply market, enabling savings of up to 50% on procurement.
Matchory has been operating since 2019 but raised its first external funding of €1.6M only in summer 2022. It has now raised a new €6M round.
The global economic geography has been shifting significantly in recent years. Trade sanctions, geopolitical tensions, disruptions to established trade corridors, and supply chain fragility – all of these have forced companies to rethink relationships they treated as permanent.
The result is a surge in demand for platforms that can help companies monitor, stress-test, and reconfigure their supply networks quickly and efficiently. It's not coincidental that Matchory's previous funding round came in summer 2022, just as significant disruptions to established global supply relationships began reshaping the landscape.
AI has also changed what's possible in this space. Building high-quality company databases now means pulling from far more sources, with dramatically better analysis and cross-referencing – and doing it quickly enough to keep the data actually current. That's a meaningful shift, and it's changing the competitive dynamics of company intelligence platforms broadly, not just in supply chain.
Openmart ([related review](/review/jeto-uzhe-dengi-no-mozhno-zarabotat-eshhjo-bolshe)), a recent Y Combinator graduate, used AI to build a database of local businesses for national and regional distributors to find prospective customers. It raised $2.75M.
Resquared ([related review](/review/zarabatyvaj-na-teh-kogo-trudno-najti)) raised $5M in July on an AI sales platform designed specifically to help businesses find and sell to other local businesses. It also came through Y Combinator, in an earlier cohort before the AI infrastructure existed.
Both Openmart and Resquared focused on building databases of local businesses as targets for domestic sales. But if platforms like Matchory enable companies to find suppliers anywhere in the world, the logical complement is platforms that help suppliers find buyers in other countries.
Those platforms probably need to reach distributors and retail chains rather than small local businesses – partners who can absorb larger volumes with less friction.
Onex ([related review](/review/lokalnye-posredniki-jeto-globalnye-dengi)) has done exactly this for medical products, building a verified database of medical distributors across 78 countries and wrapping it in a managed service: shortlisting qualified contacts, preparing regulatory documents and marketing materials, and providing ongoing distribution reports. Onex raised $1.2M.
The key lesson from Onex: the value isn't the database – it's the service layer on top. That's where the real revenue is. Selling database access is a business; helping clients actually execute market entry is a much better one.
OffDeal ([related review](/review/vygodnee-prodavat-ne-instrument-a-rezultat)) followed the same arc – from AI-powered database to full-service investment banking for small business acquisitions, earning commissions on completed deals rather than subscriptions. It raised $4.6M and has since shifted to representing sellers looking for acquirers, again as a service rather than a data product.
Matchory itself could make a similar move. Its supplier database could anchor a more comprehensive service – one that integrates global logistics partners and an AI layer that continuously recommends the most cost-efficient sourcing option given current supplier offers and available shipping routes. Nash ([related review](/review/marketplejs-kak-chjornyj-jashhik)) has built something analogous in local delivery: a platform that automatically selects the best available courier service in real time based on price and availability. The same concept applied to global procurement is a credible next step.
The directional bet: build global supplier and buyer databases, but wrap them in services that generate meaningful value – and meaningful margin – on top of the data itself.
Global trade isn't going away. But the assumption that supply chains, once built, can be left alone is gone. They need to be actively maintained, monitored, and periodically restructured. Platforms that make that fast and economically sound are becoming necessary infrastructure – and investment in Matchory is one more signal that the market agrees.