The Future of Unified Commerce with Violet CEO Brandon Schulz

Violet is the universal API ushering in a new era of distributed commerce. Violet

prides itself in enabling any channel to launch a fully integrated checkout,

so no more painful integrations.

The team recently closed a $10M Series A led by Klarna and notable commerce

investors. 


We sat down with Violet CEO Brandon Schulz

to dive into the behind-the-scenes efforts that go into connecting every

corner of the digital marketplace. We cover a range of topics,

including: 


  1. Identifying and targeting unique segments of the Violet audience

  2. How the team closed on a $10 million funding round within 90 days

  3. The industry shifts they’re most excited to witness and participate in

“We solve the expensive headache of building out individualized integrations for every eCom platform. Basically, we do the work so your company won’t have to.” 



Building and connecting your audience segments 

In Brandon’s words, Violet can be summarized as an API that simplifies

numerous eCom platform integrations into a singular set of

endpoints. 


Specifically, Violet’s API makes it possible to purchase any good or

service online natively from any online channel, as if you were purchasing

directly from the merchant’s store. They do this by using a single API to

integrate a merchant’s backend with any online frontend experience, syncing

accurate inventory, pricing, tax, and shipping info. 


As such, it solves the common roadblock of building a custom integration

every time you. It’s an issue most of today’s innovative eCom companies

encounter, but either doesn’t have the dollars or the time to

solve. 


This pain also never goes away as you scale, in fact growing more cumbersome as the company adds more tools and complexity. 

However, the Violet sales model also expands beyond brands or companies in

the ecosystem to serve three primary audiences: channels, developers, and

merchants.


1. The Channels

The Violet team defines a channel as any place where a shopper can purchase

a product that is not an individual merchant’s or company’s website, i.e.

your Instagram Shopping tab. 


Violet thus enables digital commerce for channels by connecting them to

merchants, while relieving them of tasks like carrying inventory or

executing fulfillment. 


Put simply, Violet allows for any shopping experience to function like your

high-performing eCom website, but without the actual meticulous challenges

of eCom. Diving deeper, the company is based around the idea that any online

channel that has a captive audience can start to monetize by offering that

audience goods that are relevant to them, without redirecting them to click

out to merchant sites.


2. The Developers

There are always engineering resources and degrees of familiarity on the

other side of any channel, and in the past, it has been an exhausting

exchange to agree upon a joint roadmap and working style.


Any founder will tell you that engineering efforts and resources are

invaluable in the early days, so Violet gets your team back to building new

functionality in other high-impact areas.


3. The Merchants

Merchants, whether it be work-from-home artists to large-scale enterprises,

are going to sell their products across different sites and apps.


Violet enables merchants to connect with a consistently growing set of

sales channels, through which they can easily acquire new customers from

across the Internet. 


“Some startups are still handling orders manually: spinning up webpages, typing in credit card numbers, etc. And that all goes away when they use Violet. Seeing that impact on their operations and customer experience is so exciting for us.” 



Orchestrating a $10 Million fundraise 

In October, Violet raised a Series A round of $10 million

which was led by Klarna, the eCom giant and Swedish fintech company best

known for their post-purchase payments software. 


They closed on the round within 90 days, a feat Brandon attributes to ideal

market timing, having a slate of primed investors, and the capabilities of

the Violet team that were crucial to executing a product of such breadth and

scope. 


Another important factor that allowed for the round to fall into place is the pure size of the opportunity. As Brandon tells it, had the financing not been so significant, the Violet

team likely would have hesitated on raising a Series A round so

soon. 


As a result, the Violet team emerged from fundraising with $10 million

under their belt to continue building for a deeply integrated digital

marketplace, in addition to the potential of tapping into Klarna’s hundreds

of thousands of deep merchant relationships. 


“Klarna’s seal of approval helped cement our faith in Violet’s trajectory. After all, we knew the tech was ready – the question was if the market was ready for us.”



The Violet Roadmap: Technical growth and universal checkout

When asked what they’re most excited about on the horizon for Violet, Brandon and Tyler highlighted a couple of target areas. 

Phase One: Unblocking technical growth for early-stage startups

A notable percentage of Violet users are early-stage startups who are

beginning to see financial strides and product-market fit, yet are held back

by less fine-tuned technical stacks. 


Often in young companies, this manifests in something Violet calls "manual

re-ordering,” in which an online channel processes every step of their

merchants’ orders manually. This can create immense bottlenecks and

roadblocks to scale. 


When companies like this migrate to Violate, they get a new infrastructure

that unblocks that center of cost and frees up the pipeline for

unprecedented operational efficiency and degrees of scale — which both

Violet team members describe as their favorite part of implementing the

product. 


Phase Two: Introducing a unified checkout that delivers

As Brandon tells it, a number of universal commerce API tools are floating

around the ecosystem, to the point where the term itself seems to have lost

its original value. 


But while these tend to focus on static data, i.e. product data or product

feeds, the Violet team has been laser-focused on offering an unmatched

technical win: enabling and mastering full native checkout functionality

through an API.


The potential impact here is huge. Typically, the order of operations that

must occur for a successful purchase has typically been too multi-layered

for one channel or merchant to build their own integrations. 


Building those integrations requires solving a number of challenges, including: 

  • How do you make sure your cart is synced with the merchant’s site without scraping or manual processes? 

  • How do you calculate appropriate shipping and tax rates? 

  • How do you update inventory and fulfillment centers respectively? 

  • How do you handle returns and exchanges?

As such, the Violet team’s success in rebuilding this native experience for

non-native channels will only serve as a jumping point for continued

expansions and improvements for channels and shoppers alike. As the industry

and its shoppers continue to evolve past old eCommerce ways, it looks to be

perfect timing for the Violet solution. 


“Building the checkout was easily the most challenging part. It’s what we’ve put the most time and energy toward. And watching brands implement this to build out new experiences is the most rewarding part as well.”

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Grow your business with the most powerful all-in-one subscription suite on the market.


Copyright © 2025 Skio. All rights reserved.