Stord has raised $405.0M in total across 7 funding rounds.
Stord's investors include 8VC, B Capital Group, Comal Ventures, Cyberlaunch, EVE Atlas, First Round Capital, Founders Fund, Kleiner Perkins, LGF, Danielle Lay, NewView Capital, Owl Ventures.
Stord is a technology company pioneering the world's first Cloud Supply Chain, integrating supply chain management software with physical "port-to-porch" 3PL logistics services, including fulfillment, warehousing, transportation, order management systems (OMS), and warehouse management systems (WMS).[1][2][3] It serves DTC and B2B ecommerce brands, solving the problem of fragmented supply chains by offering a unified platform that scales operations, reduces costs, boosts revenue, and improves customer experiences through on-demand, usage-based pricing and tailored fulfillment options like temperature-controlled storage.[1][5] With nearly $10 billion in annual commerce managed, Stord has demonstrated explosive growth, achieving 10x contracted revenue, sustained profitability in 2024, and recognition on the Inc. 5000 list for five consecutive years as of 2025—placing it in the top 1% of fastest-growing U.S. companies—while expanding to over 20 global fulfillment nodes.[4]
Founded in 2015 and headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia—with additional offices in Austin, Texas, and Springfield, Missouri—Stord emerged amid the rise of omnichannel commerce demands, transitioning from the DIY logistics era (1900-2000) and 3PL outsourcing (2000-2020) to the current "Era of Intelligent Orchestration," where brands need scalable, optimized supply chains.[2][3] Co-founders include CTO Jacob Boudreau, who has highlighted the company's focus on technology-driven growth, alongside CEO Sean Henry, who in 2021 described Stord as a "control tower" for end-to-end supply chains.[1][4] Early traction built on consolidating software and logistics into a cloud model, enabling brands to manage inventory across multiple 3PLs with real-time visibility, setting the stage for acquisitions like ProPack Logistics, Pitney Bowes e-Commerce, Ware2Go, and Penny Black to fuel expansion.[1][4]
Stord rides the surge in consumer demand for faster, flexible delivery amid ecommerce boom, addressing supply chain inefficiencies exacerbated by omnichannel retail and global disruptions.[1][3] Its timing aligns perfectly with the shift to intelligent orchestration post-2020, where brands outsource beyond basic 3PL capacity to data-driven platforms that optimize across digital-physical logistics—capitalizing on market forces like rising DTC expectations and economies of scale.[1][3][4] By empowering brands like AG1 to scale seamlessly, Stord influences the ecosystem as a commerce enabler, reducing operational headaches and setting standards for cloud-native supply chains that competitors like traditional 3PLs struggle to match.[5]
Stord's trajectory positions it to dominate cloud supply chains, with ongoing network expansions, tech enhancements, and acquisition integrations fueling further penetration into high-volume ecommerce.[4] Trends like AI-driven optimization and global omnichannel growth will amplify its edge, potentially evolving it into the default infrastructure for brands seeking competitive delivery advantages. As a five-time Inc. 5000 honoree managing billions in commerce, Stord exemplifies how unified platforms turn supply chain complexity into scalable revenue drivers.[4]
Stord has raised $405.0M across 7 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $80.0M Series E in May 2025.