Funding

Beam Impact Reels In $13.3 Million Series A

NEW YORK — Beam Impact, a social impact tech company, has raised $13.3 million in Series A funding to help mission-driven ecommerce brands build stronger loyalty by empowering people to make an impact on massive social issues as part of their everyday purchases. Index Ventures led the funding round with participation from previous investors Ulu Ventures and HearstLab as well as strategic angels like Brian Long and Andrew Jones (co-founders of Attentive), and Ruchika Julapalli (Head of Product at Everlane). This brings Beam’s total funding to date to $15.4 million.

Beam is on a mission to create what loyalty would look like if it were designed for today’s customers in order to shift $10 billion from brands to high-impact nonprofits. For consumers who feel powerless about daunting social issues, particularly Millennials and Get Z, Beam is a way to make a measurable impact every day. For e-commerce brands facing all-time highs in competition and difficulty standing out amid growing greenwashing, Beam’s platform builds community and lifts loyalty with customers over shared values. To take on these issues, Beam will use funds from this round to aggressively grow its team, expand its network of partners, and deepen its product offering to fully serve brands, nonprofits, and consumers who want to make a difference.

A New Way to Make an Impact: How Beam Works

Beam’s B2B2C model lets customers discover mission-driven brands through the free Beam app, and make an impact directly while checking out with the Beam ecommerce integration. Beam pairs partner brands with vetted nonprofits reflecting their values and lets customers choose a nonprofit while checking out, where the brand donates part of their purchase at no extra cost.

The Beam platform provides real-time transparency at every point in the consumer journey into how the customer’s dollars are going towards tangible goals, like funding 100 hours of free therapy for Queer and Trans teens in their area. As customers become progressively more invested in helping organizations reach their goals, they concentrate more of their spending with brands on Beam. Beam’s platform has already demonstrated that it drives a 15% lift in average order value, an 11% improvement in conversion, and a 30% lift in quarterly order frequency for partner brands.

“At Hanky Panky, uplifting women has been core to who we are since 1977,” said Stephanie Thrasher, Associate Director of Ecommerce at Hanky Panky. “Working with Beam has enabled us to make that commitment tangible to customers and allows our community to visualize how they’re part of something meaningful with every order— it makes them want to order from us more and more.”

Beam has already closed partnerships with more than 100 leading brands, such as Instacart, Roots Canada, and Parade. It has also partnered with over 500 nonprofits in the last year. By providing the technology and connective tissue between brands, consumers, and nonprofits, tremendous outcomes have been achieved, like funding more than 5 million meals for families experiencing food insecurity, preventing over 1 million pounds of CO2 emissions, and more. As impact becomes a bigger part of users’ everyday lives, 70% go on to support nonprofits they discovered through the Beam platform with their own time, money, and voice.

“We created Beam to connect people anxious to make a bigger impact every day with brands who have the resources and intent to,” said Viveka Hulyalkar, CEO and Co-founder of Beam. “When we use our spending power to make brands ‘walking the walk’ win, we create accountability for others to be like them—especially as competition in ecommerce is at an all-time high and consumers demand more of the companies they choose to do business with. The private sector is not a silver bullet to complex problems like racial inequity or climate change, but by using it to drive tremendous resources to grassroots organizations, we can create lasting change at scale.”