Full-Time
Posted on 11/7/2025
Direct-to-consumer fine jewelry retailer
No salary listed
Miami, FL, USA
In Person
| , |
Mejuri makes handcrafted fine jewelry (gold and silver) and sells it online directly to customers. Its pieces are designed for everyday wear, not just special occasions, and the company releases new designs weekly. By cutting out traditional retail markups and selling directly through mejuri.com, Mejuri offers premium-looking jewelry at more affordable prices while maintaining high-quality materials and craftsmanship. The business differentiates itself from competitors with its direct-to-consumer model, frequent new drops, and a focus on accessible, fashion-oriented pieces rather than relying on brick-and-mortar stores. Mejuri’s goal is to democratize fine jewelry for a style-conscious audience by providing quality, on-trend pieces at approachable prices and a convenient online shopping experience with free shipping and returns.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
Series B
Total Funding
$29M
Headquarters
Toronto, Canada
Founded
2013
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Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
Life Insurance
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Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account
Unlimited Paid Time Off
Flexible Work Hours
Remote Work Options
Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Paid Holidays
Sabbatical Leave
Hybrid Work Options
Stock Options
Company Equity
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Performance Bonus
Profit Sharing
Employee Stock Purchase Plan
Relocation Assistance
Employee Referral Bonus
Student Loan Assistance
Parental Leave
Family Planning Benefits
Fertility Treatment Support
Adoption Assistance
Childcare Support
Elder Care Support
Pet Insurance
Bereavement Leave
Professional Development Budget
Conference Attendance Budget
Training Programs
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Professional Certification Support
Mentorship Program
Wellness Program
Mental Health Support
Gym Membership
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Phone/Internet Stipend
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2026 digital retail forecast: challenges, opportunities and strategies. * Session Recaps Register for the 2026 CommerceNext Growth Show, June 23-24 in NYC to join 2700+ attendees, 150+ speakers and 60+ sessions. Economic uncertainty, fragmented discovery, shifting generational behavior and rising expectations around trust are all reshaping how retailers plan for growth. In this CommerceNext webinar, Forrester, Mejuri, B&H Photo and RTB House came together to explore what digital retail leaders need to know about 2026 and how brands can adapt without losing sight of the fundamentals. What CommerceNext, LLC covered: * Peak ambiguity and the new planning environment * Discovery is fragmenting, but proven channels still matter * Consumer behavior is more research-heavy, generational and multi-device * Trust, fulfillment and measurement will define the winners Speakers: * Sucharita Kodali, VP & Principal Analyst, Forrester * Rohit Nathany, CTPO, Mejuri * Jeff Gerstel, CMO, B&H Photo * Jaysen Gillespie, VP, Global Head of Product Marketing and Analytics, RTB House * Moderated by: Jenny Marlo, Head of Content, CommerceNext Peak ambiguity and the new planning environment. Forrester framed 2026 with a phrase that set the tone for the entire conversation: peak ambiguity. Between high interest rates, soft consumer sentiment, geopolitical volatility and ongoing questions around AI's impact on jobs, creativity and decision-making, retail leaders are operating in an environment where certainty is in short supply. The panel reinforced that there is no single playbook for how adjusting to this ambiguity. Mejuri explained that for growing brands like themselves, the answer is not to retreat but to focus on sustainable growth, scenario planning and the fundamentals that matter most: strengthening the brand, investing in customer experience and building community. B&H Photo offered a similarly pragmatic view, emphasizing the importance of focusing on what you can control, staying flexible and continuing to execute against what already works while remaining ready for sudden change. 2026 planning cannot be passive. Retailers need to actively plan around softer demand, operational pressure and uneven market conditions, even if the exact shape of disruption is still unfolding. Discovery is fragmenting, but proven channels still matter. The "front door" to retail is getting more crowded. Search is no longer the only place discovery begins. Social platforms, AI tools and answer engines are increasingly entering the mix, especially for younger consumers. But that does not mean retailers should rush to abandon the channels that already perform. Forrester described this shift as discovery disrupted. Google remains dominant, but consumers are also turning to Instagram, TikTok and AI tools like ChatGPT for product discovery and research. Much of that activity is still top-of-funnel, focused on research, comparison and summaries rather than transactions. Forrester also noted that even if AI could make purchasing faster than Amazon, 80% of consumers would still prefer to complete their purchase through Amazon. B&H Photo emphasized a measured approach, testing emerging platforms without pulling spend from proven channels. Discovery is evolving, but not fully transformed, so brands should keep experimenting while staying disciplined on performance. Mejuri noted that AI-driven discovery will vary by category, especially in highly visual spaces like jewelry. Still, the brand is reinforcing the importance of core fundamentals like community, UGC and strong brand presence, with added focus on monitoring how brands surface in AI search. The takeaway: discovery is widening, not replacing. Retailers should test new platforms, but protect the channels that still drive meaningful performance. Consumer behavior is more research-heavy, generational and multi-device. RTB House's research added a sharp consumer lens to the webinar and challenged some familiar assumptions about how people shop online today. One of the most striking findings was that even relatively low-cost purchases often require multiple site visits before conversion. For higher-ticket products, that consideration cycle becomes even longer, with many shoppers returning four, five or six times before they are ready to buy. This behavior is especially pronounced among younger consumers. Gen Z and Millennials are more likely to research extensively, spend longer evaluating options and leave products sitting in their cart for days before checking out. By contrast, older shoppers are more likely to arrive knowing what they want and complete the purchase in fewer steps. RTB House argued that these younger behaviors are not a passing phase. They are likely to shape the future of commerce more broadly. The research also reflected a more price-conscious consumer environment. Shoppers are still switching retailers due to cost, and RTB House's findings pointed to a K-shaped economy where spending pressure is unevenly distributed. One of the more surprising patterns: younger cohorts were more likely than older ones to say they planned to spend more, challenging the assumption that spending resilience is concentrated among older consumers. For marketers, that means the growth path is getting longer and less linear. Winning no longer comes down to the last click. It requires staying visible and relevant throughout an extended consideration cycle and across every device and touchpoint involved. Trust, fulfillment and measurement will define the winners. If discovery is fragmenting and behavior is becoming more complex, the webinar made clear that trust, fulfillment and measurement will be critical differentiators in 2026. Forrester emphasized that Amazon's advantage isn't just scale, but trust in the post-purchase experience - reliable delivery, easy returns and consistent service. That standard now shapes expectations across ecommerce, with B&H Photo reinforcing that the real work often happens during and after the transaction to drive repeat customers. On measurement, RTB House highlighted the need to move beyond platform-reported performance toward true incrementality. Attributed results can be misleading, making unbiased testing and clear success metrics essential for understanding real impact. As media fragments across channels, marketers should align measurement to each tactic's role - using transactional metrics for lower funnel and awareness or consideration metrics for upper funnel. Finally, Forrester noted that while shopper-facing AI commerce is still early, "agentic under the hood" use cases are already delivering value - pointing brands toward practical, ROI-driven AI applications over hype. CommerceNext steps. * Peak ambiguity demands proactive leadership. Plan ahead, advocate strategically and collaborate to stay ahead. * Discovery is fragmenting. Balance innovation with proven channels. Test new platforms, but protect high-performing search and social. * Trust and fulfillment remain core differentiators. Consumers still default to Amazon - AI-first leaders can capture the gap. * Consumer behavior is now age-driven, research-heavy & multi-device. Marketers must meet shoppers on every channel and win the long consideration phase - not just the last click. Want more insights on what's next for retail growth, AI and ecommerce strategy? Join CommerceNext, LLC June 23-24 in NYC for the 2026 CommerceNext Growth Show by registering today.
How Mejuri streamlined global fulfillment with Shopify's native order management. Mejuri is a fast-growing global jewelry retailer expanding rapidly across online and retail channels. But as they scaled internationally, their custom-built fulfillment system couldn't keep pace with growing complexity, causing high engineering effort, shipping delays, and unnecessary costs. Each new market required months of custom development, while managing regional routing rules became exponentially complex. The UK market became their biggest headache. Mandatory jewelry hallmarking - a legal requirement where precious metals must be tested and certified by authorized assay offices before sale - trapped Mejuri in a costly fulfillment loop: Toronto | London for hallmarking | back to Toronto for storage | London again for delivery. Three international flights for one piece of jewelry resulted in 7-9 day fulfillment times and over $100K in extra monthly shipping costs. "Every new market meant more custom work, more maintenance, and more engineering resources tied up in operations instead of innovation," explains Rohit Nathany, Chief Digital Officer. Discovering Shopify's native order management potential. When Mejuri started looking at advanced Order Management Systems to handle their growing complexity, they asked themselves: could Shopify do it? What they discovered surprised them - Shopify's built-in order management and fulfillment features could not only handle their complexity, but help solve their UK shipping challenges and expand faster into new markets. The strategic decision to replatform on Shopify allowed them to satisfy 80% of their order management and routing requirements with off-the-shelf features, while maintaining flexibility to extend functionality through Shopify's fulfillment APIs. This immediately unlocked capabilities their custom system couldn't handle: turning retail stores into fulfillment centers, intelligent order routing across multiple locations, and rapid market expansion without custom development. The platform has improved cross-functional collaboration through features like order timelines, notes, and tags. We have better visibility across teams and can make decisions faster. Mejuri Rohit Nathany - Chief Digital Officer Transforming operations with retail fulfillment hubs. Working with Codeture, led by Stefan Vermaas, proved essential for Mejuri's successful migration. "He was less of an agency, more of an extension of our engineering leadership team," explains Nathany. Stefan's analysis guided Mejuri's strategic shift to Shopify while coaching their team during implementation. The UK market transformation showcased the power of Mejuri's new approach. Instead of the costly three-flight journey, products now go directly from the UK assay office to their King's Road store after hallmarking. When UK customers place an order, jewelry ships straight from London. Results were immediate: UK lead times dropped from 7-9 days to 1-2 days while slashing monthly shipping costs by over $100K. Using retail stores as fulfillment hubs was so successful that they expanded the concept to 5 North American locations, with plans to roll it out across most of their 35 global retail stores. The transformation also accelerated market expansion from months to hours. When they noticed significant traffic from Mexico, they enabled shipping there within hours of receiving internal approval. "We can just select it in the Shopify admin and light it up," says Kari Beiswanger, Senior Product Manager. This project proved Shopify can handle enterprise-level fulfillment. It's not about switching platforms, it's about rethinking how modern retail scales globally. Codeture Stefan Vermaas Future-proof order management. Shopify now serves as the central hub in Mejuri's technology ecosystem, freeing their engineering team to focus on innovation instead of maintenance. The platform's native capabilities handle complex routing decisions automatically, while Shopify Flow enables powerful automations with minimal engineering effort, from customizing orders to implementing fraud detection. For merchants wrestling with complex fulfillment challenges, Mejuri's transformation shows how Shopify's capabilities can replace expensive Order Management Systems while providing the flexibility to customize for unique business needs, positioning businesses for scalable future growth. Flow has been a huge unlock. These automations free up engineering resources to work on more complex projects while improving our customer service capabilities. Mejuri Kari Beiswanger - Senior Product Manager Industry. Trang phục và phụ kiện Products. Ứng dụng Shop
MidCap Financial has provided a senior secured credit facility to Mejuri, a direct-to-consumer jewelry retailer. The facility includes a revolver to refinance Mejuri's existing credit facility and support working capital needs and growth. Mejuri operates through its e-commerce platform and more than 55 brick-and-mortar retail locations globally, focusing on ethically sourced, everyday fine jewelry at accessible price points. The company serves over 3 million customers. MidCap Financial, a middle-market specialty finance firm managed by Apollo Capital Management, provides administrative services for approximately $61 billion of commitments as of December 2025. Apollo Global Management had $938 billion in assets under management at year-end 2025.
Mejuri opens shop in Nordstrom as part of retail expansion. Toronto-based jewelry brand Mejuri has opened its first US in-store shop at Nordstrom's New York City flagship. The brand is increasing its retail footprint in a push to reach more customers directly, and it now has more than 50 local and international stores, including 14 that opened this year. The retail growth is part of Mejuri's broader strategy to expand its US presence and solidify its position as a leading direct-to-consumer jewelry brand, while also exploring select wholesale partnerships. Designed specifically for retail professionals, NRF SmartBrief is a free, daily email newsletter. It provides the latest need-to-know news and industry information that maximizes your time, giving you an edge over your competition.
Mejuri makes its move: canadian brand opens first Australian store in Sydney.