From Friendship to Founding a Fashion Platform
Timothée Linyer’s entrepreneurial story begins not with a pitch deck, but with a long-standing friendship. Alongside childhood friend Edouard Caraco, he co-founded The Bradery in Paris in 2018, a flash-sale e-commerce platform aimed at a new generation of style-conscious consumers.
The concept was straightforward yet disruptive: curate past collections from premium fashion brands, sell them in short bursts, and use Instagram to drive urgency and community engagement. Targeting 18–35-year-olds, The Bradery tapped into the scroll-and-shop habits of its core audience.
A Model Built for Speed and Scale
From day one, The Bradery embraced agility. By 2019, the team had migrated to Shopify Plus, enabling them to run up to three daily flash sales without an in-house tech team. This lean operational model delivered measurable results, 4× revenue growth and a 20% lift in conversion rates in under a year.
By combining social media reach with rapid product turnover, Linyer and his team created a high-energy retail cycle that kept both brands and buyers coming back.
Hyper-Growth and European Expansion
The numbers tell a striking story. Publicly available sources confirm that The Bradery targeted around €50 million in revenue in 2021, while no verified revenue figures for 2019 or 2020 have been disclosed. Expansion into Belgium and Spain followed, bringing the platform’s unique mix of premium labels and limited-time offers to new markets.
Today, over 200,000 regular purchasers and a community of ~300,000 Instagram followers engage with The Bradery’s drops, making it a go-to destination for fashion-forward millennials seeking both value and discovery.
Strategic Acquisition Without Losing Identity
In April 2022, Showroomprivé acquired a majority stake in The Bradery. While joining a larger e-commerce group, the brand retained its own identity and management team. The deal unlocked access to expanded logistics, operational resources, and a wider audience, without sacrificing the culture and customer experience that fueled its rise.
For Linyer, the acquisition marked a new phase: scaling with the backing of an established player while continuing to operate with the agility of a startup.
Shaping the Future of Social Commerce
Linyer’s leadership sits at the intersection of fashion, tech, and community. By integrating influencer marketing, rapid e-commerce execution, and premium brand partnerships, he’s built a model that resonates in the age of social commerce.
The Bradery’s growth is proof that you don’t need massive in-house infrastructure to compete, you need sharp execution, deep audience understanding, and the willingness to adapt at speed.