Appear Here is an online marketplace for retail space.[1] Since the company was founded in 2014, it has facilitated the opening of over 10,000 stores in the UK, US, and France.[2]
Industry | Tech |
---|---|
Founded | 2014 London, United Kingdom. |
Founder | Ross Bailey |
Headquarters | London |
Areas served | Worldwide |
Key people | |
Services | Flexible retail space |
Website | appearhere |
History
editIn the summer of 2012, Ross Bailey and a friend decided to create a brand called Rock and Rule to celebrate the Queen's Diamond Jubilee.[3] They opened a pop up shop on Marshall Street, Soho to launch it. What surprised Bailey was the number of people asking him how he got hold of the shop.[4] It was at this point he realised there was an opportunity to make it easier for people to find and rent short-term retail space.[5] When Rock and Rule closed, Bailey took his share of the profit and put it into launching Appear Here.[6]
Currently, Appear Here lists over 10,000 short-term spaces worldwide, with prime retail properties in global cities including, London, Manchester, New York City and Paris.[7] Over 200,000 brands have signed up to the platform, including Apple, Supreme, Nike, Netflix, Chanel and Tommy Hilfiger.[8]
Expansion
editIn November 2013, Appear Here closed a £1 million funding round, securing backing from Howzat Partners (backers of Trivago), MMC Ventures (backers of AlexandAlexa) and Forward Investment Partners (existing investors and backers of uSwitch and Hailo). Other participants in this round include Meyer Bergman, Playfair Capital and Ballpark Ventures, as well as Marc Hazan (of Spotify) and Miroma Ventures (investors in Pinterest).[9]
In November 2014, Appear Here raised a further £5 million from Balderton Capital to fund its international expansion. In 2016, Appear Here launched in its first international city, Paris.[10] In April 2017, Appear Here expanded to the US, launching in New York.[11]
In May 2017, Appear Here raised $12 million in Series B funding. Leading the round was Octopus Ventures, with participation from Simon Venture Group, and existing investors Balderton Capital, MMC, Meyer Bergman and Playfair Capital.[12]
Partnerships
editTransport for London, April 2014
editTransport for London appointed Appear Here to introduce pop up shops across its retail estate,[13] including key underground stations such as, Piccadilly Circus tube station, Baker Street, Old Street Station, St Paul's tube station and Leicester Square. As part of this new partnership, Appear Here took an active role in the curation of Old Street Station transforming it into a new retail destination dedicated to pop-up retail.[14] The station was given a revamp and eight retail spaces within were white-boxed and listed on Appear Here's marketplace. In 2015, Appear Here was awarded Property Week's Placemaking award for Old Street Station. [1]. Since launch, over 500 brands have appeared in the station, including Adidas, Calvin Klein, Jamie Oliver and streetwear concept store Ejder which won Best Pop Up Shop at the Mapic Awards 2016.[15] In 2017, Netflix took over the entire station for the launch of Black Mirror Season 4.[16]
Topshop, In-Residence, September 2015
editAppear Here partnered with Topshop in 2015 to list concession space in their flagship store, 214 Oxford Street. This was the first time that concession space within the store was made available to be booked online. The spaces include market stalls, residence walls, retail and event spaces.[17]
Since launch, over 100 brands have appeared in Topshop through Appear Here, including Spotify and independent jewellery brand Littlesmith who went from one Saturday stall in Spitalfields to a permanent residence across Topshop's key stores.[18]
Hammerson, Up Market, May 2017
editHammerson and Appear Here teamed up to launch Up Market,[19] an initiative to give emerging small businesses and artisan brands the chance to access major malls and prime retail destinations. Curated by Appear Here, Up Market showcases a rotating collection of independent food, fashion and lifestyle brands in bespoke, collapsible market stalls.
As part of a three-year agreement, Up Market has already appeared in six of Hammerson's major shopping centres, opening 37 market stalls across Birmingham's Bullring, Brent Cross (London), One New Change (London), Cabot Circus (Bristol) and Victoria Quarter (Leeds).[20]
Simon Property Group, The Edit, November 2017
editSimon Property Group exclusively partnered with Appear Here to create a "new shopping experience" inside one of the country's largest malls – Roosevelt Field.[21]
Unicef Next Generation, Imad's Syrian Kitchen, March 2017
editAppear Here partnered with Unicef Next Generation to help Imad Alarnab, a Syrian chef and refugee, launch a restaurant in London.[22]
Bode Pop Up, Art Basel Miami Beach, March 2019
editDuring Art Basel Miami Beach, Appear Here partnered with menswear designer Bode to launch a store at 2621 Northwest Second Avenue. The shop sold pieces from Bode's fall collection and showcased furniture from Green River Project.[23]
References
edit- ^ "Take me to your T-shirts: the rise of the extreme pop-up". Financial Times.
- ^ "Turning the Tide - How One Entrepreneur Has Set Out To Encourage Retail Innovation". Forbes.
- ^ "Rock & Rule website". Archived from the original on 28 June 2012.
- ^ Griffith, Erin. "Where VC's Will Invest in 2018: Blockchain, AI, Voice, Pets". Wired.
- ^ "Ross Bailey's Appear Here is keeping the high street interesting". Elite Business. Elite Business. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- ^ "The 25-Year-Old CEO – Ross Bailey". The Gentleman’s Journal Podcast.
- ^ "Appear Here: "Airbnb of Retail"". Harvard Business School Digital Initiative. Harvard Business School. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- ^ "Pop Ups, David Bowie And Queen Elizabeth: In Conversation With Appear Here Founder Ross Bailey". Suitcase. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- ^ Platt, Ryan. "Retail space marketplace Appear Here raises £1m". startups.co.uk/. Retrieved 2013-11-21.
- ^ "Appear Here to take pop-up revolution to Paris". Retail Design World.
- ^ Arrigo, Yasmin. "Appear Here reveals US expansions plans". Campaign.
- ^ O'Hear, Steve. "Appear Here, a marketplace for short-term retail space, raises $12M Series B". TechCrunch.
- ^ Burn-Callander, Rebecca. "TfL to launch pop-up shops in Tube stations". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2014-03-12.
- ^ Benjamin, Kim (2 May 2014). "In pictures: Old Street Station transformed into shopping and leisure experience". Event. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
- ^ Cantwell, Johannah. "MAPIC 2016 Awards: and the winner is…". Global Real Estate Experts.
- ^ Barber, Sonya. "Old Street station has had a Black Mirror makeover – and it's freaking people out". Stylist.
- ^ Williams, Nia. "Appear Here Pops Up in Topshop". techcitynews.com. Archived from the original on 2015-12-13. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ "Permanent Littlesmith concession in Topshop follows pop-up". Retail Design World.
- ^ McGregor, Kirsty. "Hammerson partners with pop-up agency Appear Here". Drapers.
- ^ Meredith, Catherine. "Hammerson And Appear Here Launch Pop-Up Initiative". Bisnow.
- ^ Moin, David. "For Online Brands, Simon Has an Easy Entry Into Brick-and-Mortar". Women's Wear Daily.
- ^ "IMAD'S SYRIAN KITCHEN". Unicef Next Generation. Unicef. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
- ^ "Bode to Open Pop-up During Art Basel The shop is created in partnership with Appear Here". Women's Wear Daily. Retrieved 5 May 2020.