For Subscribers

How This Company Is Profiting Giving Perks to Military Members and First-Responders GovX's small customer base helped it cash in with investors.

By Michelle Goodman

This story appears in the March 2016 issue of BIZ Experiences. Subscribe »

Twin Design | Shutterstock.com

The average citizen shops online at Amazon. But folks in the military and government first-responders (such as police and firefighters) have a deeply discounted online marketplace just for them: It's called GovX, and it carries nearly 100,000 products from about 500 brands, including Ray-Ban, Garmin, prAna, Woolrich and 5.11 Tactical, at discounts of 25 to 40 percent.

It's a good deal for shoppers, but how did GovX make this niche, low-price site sound like a good deal to investors? Last summer, it announced it closed a Series B round of preferred stock financing that brought its total investments to $11.5 million.

The answer: GovX knows how to make the most of its rarefied assets. San Francisco VC firm Rothenberg Ventures, which contributed to the Series A round, was attracted to the platform's proprietary verification technology -- the software GovX developed to make sure every shopper is actually in the military or government. It also loves the huge market potential: about $75 billion in annual e-commerce sales. "If you can be the de facto market leader in selling to a subset of the American population that's empowered and growing, that's big business," says Mike Rothenberg, founder and CEO.

Seth Hamot sees a very different benefit. He's chairman of the Carlsbad, Calif., sunglasses maker SPY Optic, which partners with GovX, and the relationship has given him intel on which military and first responders buy his products. "We skew very high with firefighters but not with policemen," he says. "Now when I'm allocating resources to marketing, I tend to allocate them higher for firefighters than I do for police." How happy is Hamot to have this information? He personally invested more than $1 million in GovX.

And the e-retailer has a plan for its $11.5 million: Improve software, and draw in more customers. Because those customers mean data. Which means happy investors. Which means more customers.  

Michelle Goodman is a Seattle-based freelance journalist and author of The Anti 9-to-5 Guide.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Growing a Business

Forget Investors and Co-Founders — Here's How I Built a Lean, Scalable Business on My Terms

You don't need a partner or investors to build something that lasts. You need vision, systems and the guts to go all in on yourself. Here's how I built alone — and why I still would, even now.

Side Hustle

This 26-Year-Old's Side Hustle Turned Full-Time Business Led to $100,000 in 2.5 Months and Is On Track for $2.5 Million in 2025

Ross Friedman's successful venture started with a "Teen Night" in Boston, Massachusetts.

Business News

How Much Does Apple Pay Its Employees? Here Are the Exact Salaries of Staff Jobs, Including Developers, Engineers, and Consultants.

New federal filings submitted by Apple reveal how much the tech giant pays its employees for a variety of roles.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.

Personal Finance

How I Streamlined My Financial Reporting for Less Than $50 a Year

From revenue tracking to investment screening, Amsflow delivers.