A Saturday morning market — sellers with products displayed at tables in warm Southern California sunlight

Physical commerce, made discoverable.

A marketplace for the physical world. Sellers go live on a map at markets, events, and pop-ups. Buyers see what's actually nearby. AI runs the rest.

A clean modern open-air artisan market on a bright Southern California morning

Why this exists.

The gap

The internet routed most commerce through a handful of marketplaces. They won by giving buyers certainty: search for a thing, see it, buy it, get it tomorrow. The cost of that certainty was sellers who had to be everywhere — and inventory that had to live in a warehouse.

A category got left out. The honey at the Saturday market. The leather bag at the pop-up. The art at the festival. The food truck two blocks over. Real businesses with real demand. They mostly stayed offline because putting them online — listings, payments, fulfillment, marketing — was harder than showing up at a market and hoping for foot traffic.

Naybrs closes that gap. Sellers go live on a map at markets, events, and pop-ups. Listings stay active after the event ends. The honey that was always going to sell Saturday is now available Tuesday afternoon, with pickup.

Four moments

Where Naybrs shows up.

  • A Saturday morning market in Irvine
    01

    A Saturday morning market in Irvine

  • The same seller on Tuesday afternoon
    02

    The same seller on Tuesday afternoon

  • A festival in Long Beach on Friday night
    03

    A festival in Long Beach on Friday night

  • A neighbor's Sunday pop-up
    04

    A neighbor's Sunday pop-up

Why now.

Local commerce is a $1T category that hasn't been cracked in a decade. At the same time, the cost of running a software company has fallen to the floor for anyone willing to build with agents instead of headcount. We're building both — the marketplace, and the company that operates it — on the back of that second thing.

The product is built end to end. We're putting it in front of real sellers in Southern California now.

A Southern California open-air artisan market at blue hour as the string lights turn on
Adam Wright — founder of Naybrs

Founder

Adam Wright

Solo technical founder. Built Naybrs end to end — apps, infrastructure, payments, AI. Years of building.

Outside work: six marathons, a 50K, and a 50-mile ultra in the last two years. Same operating style — long horizon, patience, follow-through.

Questions

Get in touch

Questions? Reach out below or email a@naybrs.com.