When looking for the most relevant products and the best prices, shoppers don’t – surprisingly – have many options available to them. Depending on which research you believe, around 38-44% of product searches begin on Amazon, and another 40% or so start with a search engine. Mostly Google, of course.
Along with other marketplaces, social media, and retailer websites, it can be difficult to work out who has the best deal for that cherished consumer good you crave.
EnterĀ VettedĀ (formerly Lustre), which announced last week the launch of its AI-powered product search engine, alongside a $14 million Series A investment round led by global software investor Insight Partners. The round included participation from existing investors Index Ventures, Bling Capital, and Golden Ventures, as well as angels including Shiva Rajaraman, the former VP of Commerce at Meta.
Vetted claims to enable shoppers to effortlessly discover the brands and products most recommended for their needs, and it does so based on reviews from platforms such as Reddit, YouTube, and other reputable expert sites.
āWe spend over $100 billion shopping online, yet getting the best value has become an overwhelming and frankly anti-consumer experience,ā Stuart Kearney, co-founder at Vetted, said. āShoppers shouldnāt have to spend hours sifting through indistinguishable products littered across thousands of ad-infested sites loaded with fake reviews and unreliable information. Thatās why weāre building Vetted. Our users get a smart guide aligned with their best interests, transforming e-commerce into the simple and trustworthy experience everyone wants ā especially today, when every dollar counts.ā
Vetted uses machine learning that the startup says replicates a shopperās research process. It automatically vets trustworthy product data and analyzes everything from price history, ideal use cases, and reviewer consensus to rank the best products according to their relevance.
Vettedās search results also show users why a given product was selected, making it easy for consumers to purchase with more knowledge and confidence. Vetted has made its solution available as a browser extension, enabling shoppers to use its research engine in their laptop browser.
āOver 330,000 shoppers already trust Vetted, with users buying our recommendation in a given category 70 percent of the time,ā Hanna Jung, VP of marketing at Vetted, said. āTheyāre also asking for help beyond our initial focus on consumer electronics. With this additional funding, weāre excited to dramatically expand our product and retailer coverage to further empower shoppers across all their shopping needs.ā
āWe are thrilled to support Stuart and the Vetted team on their mission to provide a shopping experience where consumers find the products best suited to their needs with minimal effort and maximum confidence,ā said Thilo Semmelbauer, Managing Director at Insight Partners. āThe opportunities for disruption in e-commerce are endless, and Vetted is well positioned to be a dominant player.ā
As Lustre, Vetted won a 2021 Webby award for the best shopping app and is available through its website and browser extension. How does it make money? As reported by TechCrunch, affiliate links to storefronts are one way, but other revenue streams are still being clarified.
Kearney is clear, however, that it wonāt monetize user data. āThe only data we do collect are completely anonymized, aggregated, and related to general search performance to ensure weāre being helpful to our users,ā he told TechCrunch.
This article was originally published in Grit Daily and is reproduced with permission.