Phia Secures $35M to Redefine Digital Shopping
Phia, a new retail-technology startup founded by Jennifer Gates, daughter of Bill Gates, has raised $35 million to build what it calls the “next layer of shopping.” The company aims to sit on top of existing e-commerce platforms and transform static product pages into interactive, personalized experiences.
The funding round, backed by a mix of top-tier venture capital firms and strategic angels, positions Phia as one of the most closely watched consumer-tech plays of the year. While full investor details have not been publicly disclosed, the size of the round signals strong conviction in the startup’s ambition to reshape how people discover and buy products online.
A New Interface for Commerce
Phia is building an experience layer that plugs into retailers’ existing sites, using AI algorithms and rich media to help shoppers move from inspiration to purchase faster. Rather than replacing established marketplaces, the platform is designed to enhance them with guided discovery, creator-led recommendations, and context-aware product suggestions.
From Browsing to Immersive Discovery
The startup’s technology focuses on reducing the friction that often plagues modern e-commerce: endless scrolling, poor search results, and generic recommendations. By analyzing real-time behavior and intent signals, Phia aims to surface fewer but more relevant options, blending social content, editorial curation, and data-driven personalization.
Industry observers see this as part of a broader shift toward a more immersive, content-first retail model, in which AI-driven personalization and interactive interfaces sit between consumers and traditional online stores.
Strategic Edge and Market Timing
Backed by the profile of Jennifer Gates and the halo of the Bill Gates family name, Phia enters a crowded market with unusual visibility. Yet its strategy is less about celebrity and more about infrastructure: becoming the connective tissue between brands, creators, and shoppers across multiple platforms.
With fresh capital in hand, the company is expected to accelerate product development, expand engineering and data teams, and pilot its technology with select retail partners. If successful, Phia could help define how the next generation experiences shopping—less as a static catalog, and more as a dynamic, intelligent layer woven into everyday digital life.

