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.
Cost depends on project complexity, scope, and timeline — a two-sided marketplace with vendor dashboards, payment processing, and dispute resolution requires significantly more development than a basic listing platform. The number of user roles, transaction logic, and third-party integrations all affect the scope. Exact pricing is discussed individually after reviewing your project brief.
League City's economy offers several strong marketplace use cases — marine equipment and services procurement serving the Galveston Bay boating and commercial maritime community, aerospace and defense component supply connecting contractors near Johnson Space Center with specialist vendors, and local home services and trades connecting Gulf Coast homeowners with vetted contractors in the Clear Lake and Webster corridor. Each of these categories has an established buyer-seller dynamic where a structured marketplace platform reduces friction and builds transaction trust that informal referral networks cannot replicate at scale.
Timeline depends on feature scope — a focused MVP with vendor registration, listings, and payments can reach launch faster than a full platform with ratings, commission management, dispute resolution, and an admin dashboard. For League City clients entering a new market, we recommend defining the MVP scope during discovery to establish what goes into the first release and what follows in subsequent phases. Exact timelines are confirmed after your project brief is reviewed.
A standard ecommerce store sells products or services owned or controlled by a single business. A marketplace connects independent vendors or service providers with buyers — the platform operator facilitates transactions without owning the inventory or delivering the service. For League City businesses that want to become the go-to transactional hub in their niche — marine services, aerospace supply, or local trades — the marketplace model generates revenue through commissions or listing fees rather than direct sales margin, and scales with vendor and buyer growth rather than requiring proportional inventory investment.
Vendor onboarding typically includes a registration and verification flow, profile and listing creation tools, a dashboard for managing orders and payouts, and an admin approval workflow for the platform operator. For League City clients building a marketplace in regulated categories — marine services with licensing requirements or aerospace supply with compliance documentation — the onboarding flow can include document verification and credential validation steps. Vendor management scope and approval logic are designed around your specific vendor profile during the discovery phase.
Yes — hybrid marketplace architectures supporting consumer and business buyer segments are common for League City clients in the marine and aerospace supply categories where both individual buyers and procurement teams transact on the same platform. B2B functionality typically includes account-based pricing, purchase order payment options, volume discount logic, and buyer verification workflows that consumer transactions bypass. Hybrid transaction scope is confirmed during the project brief phase before architecture decisions are made.
You get a dedicated project manager throughout the build. We work in two-week sprints with working platform builds delivered to a staging environment at every stage — including functional vendor registration and transaction flows — so League City clients review real marketplace functionality before the next development cycle begins. All sprint decisions, change requests, and open issues are tracked in a shared project board. No features are deployed to the live platform without review and approval from your team.
We provide a post-launch stabilization period to address any issues that surface under real vendor and buyer conditions. Marketplace platforms require active ongoing development — vendor feedback surfaces new feature needs quickly, payment gateway changes require prompt integration updates, and platform growth typically reveals performance bottlenecks that staging environments do not replicate. League City clients who continue developing their marketplace typically stay with us on a retainer. Support and development terms are agreed in the project contract before launch.