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§ Private Profile · San Jose, CA, USA
Plastic Jungle is a technology company.
Plastic Jungle operated as a pioneering online platform that established a secondary market for gift cards, allowing consumers to buy, sell, and swap them. The service provided a liquid marketplace for unwanted gift cards, often at a discount, while also offering a mechanism for users to exchange various cards for a single preferred brand or cash equivalent. It further offered a service to replace lost, stolen, or damaged gift cards from participating retailers.
The company was founded in 2006 by Tina Henson, driven by the insight that a significant amount of gift card value went unspent or unused each year. Henson recognized the potential to unlock this dormant value by creating an efficient and secure online exchange, addressing a prevalent consumer pain point and offering an alternative to traditional gift card usage.
Plastic Jungle primarily served individual consumers looking to monetize unwanted gift cards or purchase discounted cards for personal use or gifting. The company's vision centered on maximizing the utility and value held within the vast, often illiquid, gift card market. It aimed to provide flexibility and financial benefit to gift card holders across the United States.
Plastic Jungle has raised $22.0M across 3 funding rounds.
Plastic Jungle has raised $22.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Plastic Jungle has raised $22.0M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $10.0M Series C in November 2010.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 1, 2010 | $10M Series C | JEB Miller | Benchmark, Shasta Ventures, BAY Partners, First Round Capital, Redpoint Ventures | Announced |
| Mar 1, 2010 | $7M Series B | Allen Beasley | Benchmark, Shasta Ventures, BAY Partners, First Round Capital | Announced |
| May 1, 2009 | $5M Series A | Shasta Ventures | Benchmark, BAY Partners, First Round Capital, Harrison Metal | Announced |
Plastic Jungle has raised $22.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Plastic Jungle's investors include Jeb Miller, Benchmark, Shasta Ventures, Bay Partners, First Round Capital, Redpoint Ventures, Allen Beasley, Harrison Metal.
Plastic Jungle was a technology company that operated the web’s largest secured gift card exchange platform, enabling consumers to buy, sell, and trade gift cards online. Its product served both consumers looking to convert unwanted gift cards into cash and retailers seeking to increase gift card liquidity. By solving the problem of unused or underutilized gift cards, Plastic Jungle provided a flexible marketplace that maximized value for users. The company gained significant traction as a pioneer in the secondary gift card market before being acquired, reflecting strong growth momentum in the evolving digital gift card ecosystem[3][1].
Plastic Jungle was founded by entrepreneurs focused on addressing the widespread issue of unused gift cards, a problem highlighted by consumer surveys showing many gift cards go unspent. The company emerged as an innovative solution to unlock value from these dormant assets through an online exchange platform. While specific founder details are limited, Plastic Jungle’s early success attracted attention from larger players in the gift card space. A pivotal moment came in July 2014 when CardCash, a leading gift card marketplace founded in 2009, acquired Plastic Jungle’s technology infrastructure, business partnerships, and domain name, integrating its assets to expand market reach and capabilities[1][5].
Plastic Jungle capitalized on the growing trend of digital marketplaces and the increasing consumer demand for liquidity and flexibility in gift card usage. The timing was favorable due to the rise of e-commerce, mobile payments, and consumer preference for convenient financial solutions. Market forces such as the large volume of unused gift cards and retailers’ interest in gift card resale markets created a fertile environment for Plastic Jungle’s platform. By pioneering the online gift card exchange, Plastic Jungle influenced the broader ecosystem by validating secondary markets for digital assets and encouraging innovation in gift card technology and services[3][1].
Following its acquisition by CardCash in 2014, Plastic Jungle’s technology and partnerships have continued to influence the gift card marketplace, contributing to the consolidation and growth of secondary gift card platforms. Future trends shaping this space include increased integration of AI for pricing optimization, expansion of multi-channel gift card services, and enhanced user personalization. As digital payments and gift card usage continue to grow, the legacy of Plastic Jungle’s innovation positions its technology to remain relevant within evolving consumer and retail financial ecosystems[1][2]. The company’s early vision of unlocking value from unused gift cards remains a key driver in the ongoing transformation of gift card commerce.