
Vakole
Vakole se spécialise dans les équipements et les vêtements de sport, de plein air et de fitness pour les modes de vie actifs. Ils se concentrent sur des produits conçus pour les athlètes récréatifs et sérieux.
Vakole équipe les athlètes qui refusent de choisir entre performance et passion
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Cyseekinbike
Cyseekinbike sells carbon and aluminum gravel, road, mountain and e-bikes plus framesets, wheels and cockpit parts. Complete bikes run USD 1,500–4,000 (mid-range) while high-modulus carbon framesets peak around USD 1,200. The company is digital-native: orders are placed through cyseekinbike.com and shipped factory-direct to 30 countries; there is no traditional dealer network.
The brand’s pitch is “factory carbon, rider pricing.” All frames are manufactured in-house at a 30,000 m² facility whose lay-up and molding lines are live-streamed to product pages; each frame carries a lifetime crash-replacement warranty at cost. The best-known line is the 8.6 kg Falcon Pro gravel bike whose down-tube storage hatch and integrated power meter have become standard references on Asian bike forums.
Core buyers are data-driven enthusiasts aged 25-45 who want pro-level carbon tech without boutique mark-ups. They value transparent specs—every frame weight and resin batch number is published—and the ability to customize groupsets, paint and wheel depth before checkout.
Cyseekinbike competes with direct-to-consumer performance bike brands that import open-mold frames. It differentiates by owning its carbon plant (shorter R&D cycles, QC photos attached to each serial number) and offering lifetime crash replacement at factory cost, removing the perceived risk of buying carbon online.
Factory carbon at real prices, no markup mystery
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iSinwheel
iSinwheel fabrique et vend des skateboards électriques et des roues, proposant des dispositifs de mobilité personnelle et des accessoires.
Ride the future with electric skateboards designed for pure speed
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Pejefit
Pejefit sells smart home-gym strength equipment anchored by an app-connected, motorized resistance tower that replaces a full rack of weights. Add-ons include a fold-flat bench, bar and handles; everything ships in a single box priced at mid-range—roughly US $899–$1,199—through the brand’s own site only.
The tower uses algorithm-controlled, electronic load (5–265 lb) that auto-adjusts mid-rep for eccentric overload and spotter mode; workouts are streamed on the companion app with real-time force tracking and progression analytics. The entire footprint is 2 × 2 ft, targeting apartment dwellers who want barbell-level resistance without metal plates.
Core buyers are 25-45-year-old urban professionals who value data-driven training, minimal clutter and the flexibility to strength-train without a commercial gym; sustainability and space-saving are recurring purchase drivers. Marketing leans on quantified-self language and before-after metrics rather than aspirational lifestyle imagery.
Pejefit competes in the connected strength segment against wall-mounted or large-frame smart gyms; it differentiates through a free-standing, furniture-grade tower that needs no drilling or permanent install, and by offering motorized variable resistance at a price hundreds below premium wall systems while still undercutting mid-range smart dumbbell sets on total load range.
Full gym strength, apartment footprint, data that proves your progress
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Light11
light11.de is a German online-only retailer specializing in designer lighting for indoors and outdoors. The catalogue spans ceiling, wall, floor, table and pendant lamps, plus smart-lighting systems and bulbs, from around €50 to over €3,000. Brands stocked include Louis Poulsen, Flos, Artemide, Foscarini and Tom Raffield, placing the offer in the mid-to-premium segment.
The site positions itself as “the lighting specialist,” filtering 6,000+ models by designer, room, light source and style. Same-day dispatch from a 12,000 m² warehouse, 100-day returns and free delivery within Germany on orders above €50 are core service promises. A dedicated photometric advice team and detailed beam-angle data appeal to planning professionals as well as consumers.
Core buyers are design-conscious homeowners, architects and interior fit-out firms aged 30-55 who want authentic statement pieces rather than mass-market fittings. Sustainability credentials—LED retrofit options, repair parts and energy-class filters—align with value-driven shoppers willing to pay for longevity and iconic design.
light11 competes with multi-brand furniture e-tailers, brick-and-mortar lighting chains and boutique design stores. It differentiates through depth of lighting-only inventory, rapid specialist support and price transparency that includes German VAT and duty, eliminating import surprises common on international platforms.
Designer lighting that lasts, curated by specialists who actually know their craft
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Mojawa
MOJAWA sells bone-conduction and open-ear sport headphones priced USD 99-199, placing them in the mid-range segment. Products are sold direct-to-consumer through mojawa.com and Amazon storefronts, with no branded retail presence.
The brand’s core pitch is IP68 waterproof, 32 g titanium-frame headphones that leave the ear canal open for cyclists and runners who need situational awareness. Flagship models such as the Run Plus integrate 8-hour batteries, 32 GB onboard MP3 storage and magnetic snap-charge in a single-piece design.
Typical buyers are 18-40-year-old endurance athletes, urban commuters and safety-conscious parents who value hearing traffic while training. The brand leans into an active, safety-first lifestyle and markets heavily through Strava and Zwift partnerships.
MOJAWA competes in the niche between budget plastic bone-conduction sets and premium audio brands, differentiating on higher waterproofing, lighter weight and integrated memory that removes the need to carry a phone during workouts.
Train hard, hear everything, leave your phone behind
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Camping And Co
Camping and Co is a German-language specialist for outdoor accommodation, selling campsite, glamping and mobile-home holidays across France, Spain, Italy, Croatia and Portugal. Inventory runs from simple grass pitches (€15–25 per night) through mid-range mobile-home rentals (€400–1,200 per week) to premium glamping lodges with hot tubs (€1,500–3,000 per week). Sales are 100 % online; the site acts as an OTA that aggregates 1,000+ campgrounds and processes instant bookings.
The company differentiates itself by guaranteeing the lowest campsite price and adding free cancellation up to 15 days before arrival. Every listing is geo-tagged with GPS plots of individual pitches and 360° site tours, tools few outdoor travel sites offer. Its “Smart Package” bundles linen, final cleaning and BBQ grill for a flat €49, eliminating the usual à-la-carte surcharges that inflate holiday cost.
Core buyers are German-speaking families with children under 14 who want a nature holiday without buying camping gear. Secondary segments are couples 25-45 seeking dog-friendly beach glamping and cycling retirees who book spring and autumn shoulder weeks. The brand speaks to values of hassle-free nature access, price transparency and ecological low-impact travel.
Camping and Co competes with generalist OTAs, tour-operator catalogues and direct campground sites. It narrows the field to only inspected camps, negotiates exclusive early-bird allocations and layers on German-language support, roadside-assistance add-ons and instalment payment—services the big multi-vertical platforms do not tailor for campers.
Natur ohne Stress, Camping ohne Kompromisse
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Cocopadel
Cocopadel sells women’s, men’s and kids’ padel & tennis apparel, rackets, balls, bags and accessories. Core collections are performance dresses, skirts, tops and racket covers in quick-dry fabrics; prices sit mid-range (€35-€90 for apparel, €180-€260 for rackets). The brand is digital-first: 90 % of sales come through cocopadel.com with worldwide DHL shipping; a small Stockholm showroom and select Nordic pro-shops provide limited retail touchpoints.
The label built its name on fashion-driven court wear that doubles as streetwear—think color-blocked sets, coconut-shell buttons and tonal embroidery of the palm-logo. Every garment is produced in Portuguese mills that recycle water and use OEKO-TEX dyes; rackets are manufactured in the same Spanish factory that supplies WTA players. Their “Coco Set” pleated skirt + crop top is the bestseller and appears in most Instagram UGC.
Primary buyers are 18-35 year-old urban women who play padel socially 2-3 times a week and want outfits that transition from court to café without looking overtly sporty. Sustainability, Scandinavian minimalism and a hint of resort aesthetic resonate with customers who value low-key luxury and ethical production.
Cocopadel competes in the fast-growing crossover space between boutique activewear and specialist padel equipment brands. It differentiates through tighter fashion drops (6 mini-collections a year), carbon-neutral shipping, and inclusive sizing up to 3XL—features rarely combined by either pure sports brands or high-fashion labels entering the category.
Court style that lives beyond the court
- Écoresponsable
- Recyclé
- Éthique
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