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Krrb

Krrb Classifieds
The Logo for Krrb Classifieds.png
Type of business Classifieds, E-commerce
Type of site
hyperlocal marketplace
Available in English, French, Spanish
Headquarters Brooklyn, New York City, United States
Area served Worldwide
Founder(s) George Eid
Employees 8
Parent AREA 17
Slogan(s) Buy and Sell with Locals
Website "Krrb.com". 
Alexa rank Decrease 124,542 (October 2015)
Registration Required to buy or sell
Users 130,721 (July 2015)
Launched November 18, 2010
Written in Ruby (programming language)

Krrb (pronounced 'curb') is a hyperlocal classified advertising website that allows individuals and businesses to sell vintage, antique, secondhand, handmade or locally sourced items including artisanal foods, art, design and collectables. Members of the website can also list real estate, housing, events, services, jobs and community notices. The website follows in the tradition of a neighborhood garage sale or flea market, prioritizing proximity over categorization so that users can see listings nearest to them. Each seller gets a personal storefronts (A.K.A. 'corners') where all their listings display.

As of October 2014, the company has 31,332 listings from 92,341 members in 3,211 cities and 118 countries.

Disenchanted with the state of online classifieds, "Craigslist felt like selling goods in a seedy back alley", founder George Eid decided to create an "online flea market [that] works the way craigslist should".

Krrb.com launched in November 2010 and incorporated as Krrb, Inc. in January 2011. The company is headquartered in Brooklyn, New York City and is privately owned by AREA 17, an interactive agency based in New York City and Paris, France.

AREA 17 founder George Eid founded Krrb.com as part of an incubator program started by the company, which also launched Slash Paris. Luis Lavena, core developer of Ruby (programming language), designed and developed the software and continues to lead the engineering team. Interactive art director Arnaud Mercier (now deceased) designed the logo and user interface. Andrew Wagner, former editor of ReadyMade, American Craft and Dwell Magazine and current columnist for the New York Times, joined the company in 2011 as Director and Editor in Chief. In 2014, Phil Jeffs, Director of Product at AREA 17, joined the team to lead product development.

Touted as a "prettier Craigslist" and a "hyper-local Etsy with vintage, thrift & handmade goods", Krrb was immediately embraced by influencers as a "fantastic new online happy place" to "unload your stuff with no sketchiness". In 2013, The Huffington Post named Krrb one of the "10 best websites for vintage furniture",Mashable listed the Krrb iPhone app as one of "9 excellent apps for discovering new things" and PC World listed Krrb as "our favorite lifestyle websites".


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