From first launch to ongoing upgrades — our full-service digital company builds marketplaces that scale, support your vendors, and drive real transactions.
Launch a marketplace from scratch?
Built from core logic to a live product — ready to sale.
Vendors signing up but not selling?
Stronger vendor tools, better flow, real traction.
Payments, shipping, and ops not syncing?
Payments, delivery, and vendor ops — fully connected.
Looking for long-term support, not just a build?
We're here post-launch — not just for handoff.
We scope each build individually — based on your platform type, flows, integrations,
and scale.
We didn't want a cookie-cutter solution, and Toimi understood that right away. They came back with ideas tailored exactly to our needs — creative, practical, and easy to scale.
Strong technical skills, but also patient in explaining things so everyone could follow. That balance made the whole process smooth.
Quick turnaround, clean work, good communication. Would recommend.
Working with Toimi felt straightforward and stress-free.
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
The cost depends on the marketplace model — product, service, or talent — the number of user roles, the complexity of transaction logic, and the integrations required. A two-sided marketplace connecting San Jose's dense startup ecosystem with freelance technical talent has a very different scope than a B2B procurement platform serving semiconductor and hardware suppliers across North San Jose's Innovation Triangle. Marketplace projects are scoped after a structured discovery phase covering your business model, monetization strategy, and technical requirements — no figures before that conversation.
A focused marketplace MVP — buyer and seller onboarding, listing management, search and filtering, transaction processing, and basic admin panel — typically takes 16 to 24 weeks from approved specification to launch. For San Jose businesses building more complex platforms with advanced matching algorithms, escrow payment flows, review systems, or deep integrations with the enterprise SaaS tools common in Silicon Valley's B2B ecosystem, the timeline extends to 28 to 40 weeks. We deploy in phases so your San Jose team can begin onboarding early users before the full platform is complete.
Four models come up most frequently in the San Jose market. First, B2B procurement marketplaces — connecting suppliers of components, software, and professional services to enterprise buyers in the Cisco, Adobe, and Zoom supply chain ecosystem concentrated in Downtown and North San Jose. Second, talent and freelance platforms — leveraging San Jose's exceptional STEM workforce density, where one in five residents holds a technology or engineering degree, to build specialized technical talent marketplaces. Third, SaaS integration marketplaces — app stores and partner ecosystems for San Jose software companies that want to extend their platform through third-party integrations. Fourth, hardware and electronics trading platforms serving the semiconductor and advanced manufacturing sector in Edenvale Technology Park and the broader Silicon Valley supply chain.
Marketplace development involves technical complexity that standard ecommerce does not — multi-party transaction management, trust and safety systems, search and matching at scale, and the split payment logic that distributes funds between platform, seller, and potentially multiple intermediaries. For San Jose businesses building B2B marketplaces where transaction values are high and buyer scrutiny is intense, the verification and credentialing system for sellers is often the most business-critical technical component. We scope each challenge explicitly during discovery rather than discovering them mid-development.
Payment infrastructure for marketplaces requires a different architecture than standard ecommerce — funds need to be held, split, and released according to transaction rules rather than processed directly to a single recipient. We implement Stripe Connect or equivalent multi-party payment systems that handle marketplace-specific requirements: seller onboarding and identity verification, escrow and delayed release for service marketplaces, commission calculation and automatic splits, and payout scheduling for San Jose marketplace operators managing high transaction volumes. Tax handling for California-based marketplace operators — particularly relevant under state marketplace facilitator laws — is also addressed during the payment architecture phase.
Trust infrastructure is what separates a marketplace that scales from one that stalls after initial traction. For San Jose B2B and talent marketplaces where transaction values and professional stakes are high, trust systems cover seller verification and credentialing, buyer and seller review mechanisms, dispute resolution workflows, fraud detection, and content moderation for listings. Silicon Valley's professional users have high expectations for platform integrity — a marketplace that allows unverified listings or handles disputes poorly loses credibility in a market where professional reputation travels fast through dense industry networks.
Yes — and designing for scale from the architecture stage is one of the most important decisions in marketplace development. For San Jose businesses with ambitions beyond the Bay Area market — which describes most ventures coming out of Silicon Valley's startup and enterprise ecosystem — we build on infrastructure that handles national transaction volumes without requiring a platform rebuild. This covers database architecture, search indexing, payment infrastructure that operates across US states, and a multi-region hosting setup that keeps performance consistent for users outside the San Jose and Bay Area market.
Marketplaces require more intensive post-launch support than standard websites — transaction processing, seller and buyer flows, search relevance, and fraud detection all need active monitoring and iteration as real usage patterns emerge. For San Jose marketplace operators whose platform is the core business rather than a marketing channel, we offer a post-launch retainer covering infrastructure monitoring, payment system maintenance, security updates, and a monthly development allowance for feature improvements based on user feedback. Significant new capabilities — new verticals, additional user roles, or geographic expansion — are scoped as separate development projects while the retainer keeps the core platform stable and secure.