Asked by owners.
Answered straight.
Getting started
20 minutes. We walk the platform running on a real store, map which of the nine features fit how your shop runs, and you leave with an exact price for your store. No deck, no discovery-call-then-demo-call maze.
Most stores are live within a few weeks. Everything builds in test mode against your real data first, then you flip features on one at a time, starting in co-pilot.
It depends on your catalog, your volume, and which features you run, which is exactly what the call scopes. You leave the first call with a number, not a range and a follow-up.
Sneaker, streetwear, and luxury consignment shops are home base, the platform was built inside one. If you run specialty resale of any kind, watches, bags, vintage, it's worth a call.
If you have real regulars, real inventory turning, and more DMs than time, you're in range. You don't need a big team; the point is that this does the work a bigger team would.
How the AI works
Not without you letting it. Every feature starts in co-pilot: every message waits for a staff tap before it sends. You set the voice rules, the never-text list, and the handoff triggers. Autopilot is something each feature earns from you.
It answers in your store's voice and never claims to be a specific person. Customers mostly notice the fast, useful answer. Anyone who asks for a human gets one instantly.
It reads your live inventory before every message instead of guessing, repricing has a profit floor it cannot cross, and every change keeps history for rollback. In co-pilot, a human approved it anyway.
From you. Staff thumbs-up and thumbs-down on drafts, edits before approval, and the conversations your team takes over all train it. The voice it learns carries into every feature, so month six sounds more like you than week one.
Both, used where each is honest. Schedules and triggers are automation. Reading a customer's history to pick the right pair, writing in your voice, and knowing when to hand a thread to a human is the AI. Neither sends anything outside your rules.
Your data and your stack
No. StoreFleet plugs into the stack you already run, Shopify, your POS, your consignment system, your DMs, your texting line, and works on the data already in them. No migration, no new system for staff to learn.
Yes, and it stays the boss. Where a consignment system is the source of truth, StoreFleet writes through it, never around it. Your sync stays clean.
Nothing. Everything is built and tested read-only against your real data in a sandbox. No message reaches a customer and no price changes until you deliberately flip it live.
You do. Your customers, your sales history, your conversations stay yours. We don't sell data, pool it across stores, or hold it hostage if you leave.
Working together
It does the 11pm follow-ups, the comp-checking, and the inbox triage nobody has time for, so your people stay on the floor selling. Stores keep their staff; the staff keep their nights.
Good. The platform is modular and we build custom. If your shop runs on something we haven't covered, we spec it on the call and build it into your system.
No long contract. The platform earns its keep monthly, and the revenue dashboard makes it easy to check that it does.
You text us. You work with the people who built your system, not a ticket queue. And because everything runs in your stack with history and rollback, problems are contained by design.
See it run on your store.
20 minutes. We walk the platform live on a real store, scope yours, and you leave with an exact price. No deck, no pressure. Bring your hardest workflow.