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Etsy's First Five Years
In early April of 2005, I sat in an orange chair facing an open window. It was nighttime and the lights were off. I was back in Brooklyn after a brief residence in Paris, and I was about to sketch the initial ideas that would become Etsy. Working with three friends – Chris, Haim and Jared – Etsy went from these ideas to a site live on the Web in about two months. Now, thirty-three months later, Etsy is a company with fifty employees, a community with over 650,000 members, and a marketplace with over 120,000 sellers in 127 different countries. We launched in June of 2005, which means we're right in the middle of our first five years. Where are we headed? What do we need to get there? Etsy: The Big Idea The simplest way for me to show what Etsy is all about is to read you Swimmy, a book by Leo Leonni.
Those big companies are holdovers from the days before the Web existed. And any company that is being run the same way now as it was before the Web came about is due for some massive restructuring or deflation. Etsy is a company born on the Web, literally. I see the company itself as a handmade project, and we'll continue to build it this way. There's much more to do, and we're up for the challenge. But we need more than people to get there. I am proud to announce to everyone that we have just accepted a $27 million investment. The funding comes in part from two existing Etsy investors, Union Square Ventures and Hubert Burda Media, and from an important new investor: Jim Breyer at Accel Partners. What does this mean? Who's Jim? Why do we need an investment? How will we use the funds? I'll answer all of these in order, and then paint a clear picture of where Etsy is headed. What does this investment mean? This means that we now have the resources to extend Etsy's reach in this world, to enable so many more people to make a living making things. We want Etsy to exist for hundreds of years. Our goal is for Etsy to be an independent, publicly traded company, focused on all things handmade. Throughout Etsy's growth, we have been very careful when raising money. We run the company as a democracy, meaning no one party has the power to act unilaterally. This new investment preserves these values, and adds to what we can do. Who's Jim?
Jim Breyer of Accel Partners is one of the "elder wisemen" of the investing world. Except he's not that old. He's an outstanding investor who has many times shown he can see into the heart of matters, finding and supporting businesses that tap into underlying and disruptive change for the common good. He spotted Facebook early on, and now he's joining up with Etsy. But more important than his experience and his connections, Jim is candid. As he joins our Board of Directors alongside Caterina Fake of flickr and Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures, Jim is in a position to help steer the company, and to tell us when we're off course. I asked Jim for a quote to include in this article, and here's what he had to say: "Etsy is a company with a clarity of mission that can truly have a long term impact on the way this world works. Rob himself is patient but intense, challenges conventional wisdom, and has an infectious enthusiasm and spirit." (I'm not so sure about the patient part but I've certainly been learning in that department.) Jim currently sits on the Board of several other companies you might know something about: Facebook, Marvel Entertainment and Walmart. Walmart?! That's right. Accel Partners was an investor in walmart.com, the e-commerce arm of the retail giant. Apart from Jim's insight gained from this role, there's no connection between Etsy and Walmart. Etsy is almost break-even, meaning our revenue pays all our bills, including the salaries and benefits of our fifty employees. This is a huge milestone for us! But when we look at the near future, it's not enough. Here are some specific reasons why:
If we can all team up, the way Swimmy did with all his other little fishes, we can establish our clout and credibility collectively in the upcoming years so that we can provide access to resources to our own community. Forward Looking Etsy is a young company: we're not yet three years old, the majority of our employees are under 35 years of age, and we have an exuberance that knows no age. We have certainly had our fair share of what I call "conducting our education in public," and this is something I am proud of. Throughout the myriad challenges since we launched the website, we have worked day and night to see things through. We're in this for the long haul. We believe that the world cannot keep consuming the way it does now, and that buying handmade is part of the solution. As Etsy grows, the responsibilities we have to our sellers also grow. It is humbling to know that people's incomes depend on a service we provide, and inspiring to watch more and more people make a living from their Etsy shops. The second half of our first five years will be a thrill. I am enthralled by the possibilities of what we can accomplish, and we will work unceasingly to make things happen. I hope we'll see our world take several huge steps in the right direction, and that we'll all not only take these steps together, but lead the way. love, P.P.S. I'm planning another Town Hall, so please think up any questions and post them in the comments. I'll gladly answer them during the online meetup.
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