According to techcrunch.com, e-commerce logistics company Stord has raised a $250 million funding round at a $3 billion valuation — doubling its valuation from the prior round in 2025. The Atlanta-based startup, founded in 2015 by then-college students Sean Henry, CEO, and Jacob Boudreau, CTO, has now raised a total of $775 million since inception.
Funding trajectory and investor lineup
This latest round was led by Strike Capital, the same firm that led Stord’s $200 million financing in 2025, which had valued the company at $1.5 billion. Additional participants include Kleiner Perkins, Founders Fund, Franklin Templeton, Baillie Gifford, G Squared, and Bond. The $250M round marks Stord’s emergence from the post-pandemic venture capital winter — a period during which many logistics tech startups faced fundraising headwinds or scaled back operations. Stord’s ability to secure two mega-rounds ($200M and $250M) within 12 months reflects sustained investor confidence in its differentiated model.
Anti-Amazon fulfillment infrastructure
Stord operates a distributed network of physical warehouses across the United States and integrates them with proprietary inventory management software. Unlike Amazon’s end-to-end ecosystem — where brands cede control over customer data and fulfillment speed — Stord positions itself as an “anti-Amazon” partner, enabling brands to retain ownership of their customer relationships while achieving comparable delivery velocity. Its platform supports multi-channel order routing, real-time inventory synchronization, and automated replenishment logic. In April 2026, Stord’s AI-enhanced interface was spotlighted by Google at its Cloud Next conference — underscoring growing enterprise interest in AI-augmented logistics orchestration.
Industry context and practitioner implications
Stord’s growth mirrors broader shifts in e-commerce logistics: according to Logistics Management’s 2025 Benchmark Report, 68% of mid-market DTC brands now use third-party fulfillment networks with integrated software — up from 41% in 2021. This trend is accelerating amid rising Amazon seller fees, including a fuel surcharge introduced in April 2026 following energy market volatility linked to regional conflict. Meanwhile, competitors like Flexport and C.H. Robinson have expanded warehouse-as-a-service offerings, but none match Stord’s dedicated focus on e-commerce-first automation and brand-owned data architecture. For supply chain professionals, Stord’s model signals a practical path toward resilience: modular, scalable warehousing capacity paired with API-native visibility — all without vendor lock-in. Its Atlanta headquarters anchors a Southern U.S. logistics corridor increasingly favored for nearshoring due to port access and labor availability.
Source: TechCrunch
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










