Startups

Why ORNG’s founder pivoted from college food ordering to real-time money transfer

Comment

ORNJ founder Alex Parmley
Image Credits: Aicha Abdoun

Alex Parmley has been thinking about building his latest company, ORNG, since he was working on his last company, Phood. 

Launched in 2018, Phood was a payments app that let students use dining dollars to order food from third-party apps and merchants anywhere in the world. It built the first campus-integrated debit card and worked with colleges across the nation, such as UT-Austin. 

Parmley discovered firsthand the long and boring process of moving money as a business owner. He recalled it could take 15 to 30 days for vendors to receive the actual dining dollars from the universities after students ordered. This meant the company had to raise millions in a debt facility to pay those vendors while waiting for payment from the universities to process. As inflation rates rose and debt borrowing became expensive, this made running Phood expensive. 

Parmley started wishing for a product that could let money transfer in real time, real fast. He was also ready for a change and knew that if he stayed in the market, there was a possibility his company would be squeezed out. So, after six years of running Phood, he took a big swing. He pivoted the company’s business, renamed the whole thing ORNG, and started pitching the financial contacts he made while building Phood on a bigger, more expansive idea.  

“Our product is a network that lets money move instantly and safely across countries,” he told TechCrunch about ORNG. “Kind of like sending a message but for enterprises.” 

On Friday, ORNG officially came out of stealth mode with a few clients, including publicly traded ones, though he declined to go into detail. 

ORNG works with banks, fintech companies, and large businesses that need quick and easy payments. He said right now, each country has its own way of handling fast money transfers but the platforms they use don’t always work with the platforms other countries use. This can cause a headache and financial delay — similar to how those small businesses had to wait days for the university to pay them. 

“Our method brings all these systems into one easy-to-use API,” Parmley said, adding that this means businesses can handle payments worldwide through one platform. “We’re not just making things faster; we’re making them simpler. Stripe increased the GDP of the internet; we want to increase the cash flow.” 

Parmley said that Phood’s existing investors encouraged the pivot. Phood raised around $5 million in total funding, and, in addition to using leftover Phood capital, ORNG is currently in the process of fundraising, with plans to announce a close in the upcoming months. 

“Alex learned a lot about the pace of B2B payments from his time in the campus space. It’s been awesome to see him take those hard-won learnings and apply them to ORNG,” said Lauren Deluca, founder and general partner of Motivate Venture Capital. His firm is an investor in Phood and is doubling down on Parmley as the company pivots.

Parmley came up with the new name one night while burning the midnight oil in Brooklyn and said the company has an “extremely detailed plan,” on what it plans to do next. He says much of the Phood team has stayed during the pivot, including one co-founder and attorney, Jackson Killion. Twelve people work at ORNG now, while the other Phood co-founders, Matt Waymouth and Jake Westmoreland, have since left to start a company and a family, respectively.

Pivoting a campus dining company into a real-time payment facilitator is quite the feat. But swinging big has always been part of Parlmey’s life. He grew up in Alabama and didn’t attend college.

“I learned everything from Mr. Wong [a business owner] at my mother’s restaurant job growing up, my mom rolling coins so we could eat and my grandmother letting me take the money out of hers and pay for the things she needed to buy,” he recalled. His mother couldn’t afford preschool, so she took him to work every day. 

“I grew up in the struggle, so I had to learn math.” 

One day, he found himself on a college campus, crashing on a friend’s sofa, wondering why it wasn’t easier to order food to the house, and hence Phood was born. Today he’s banking on the fact that the journey of building Phood will help change the world.

“My life experiences were my education.” 

More TechCrunch

It’s looking increasingly likely that OpenAI will soon alter its complex corporate structure. Reports earlier this week suggested that the AI company was in talks to raise $6.5 billion at…

OpenAI could shake up its nonprofit structure next year

Fusion startups have raised $7.1 billion to date, with the majority of it going to a handful of companies. 

Every fusion startup that has raised over $300M

Netflix has never quite cracked the talk show formula, but maybe it can borrow an existing hit from YouTube. According to Bloomberg, the streamer is in talks with BuzzFeed to…

‘Hot Ones’ could add some heat to Netflix’s live lineup

Alex Parmley has been thinking about building his latest company, ORNG, since he was working on his last company, Phood.  Launched in 2018, Phood was a payments app that let…

Why ORNG’s founder pivoted from college food ordering to real-time money transfer
Image Credits: Aicha Abdoun

Lawyers representing Sam Bankman-Fried, the FTX CEO and co-founder who was convicted of fraud and money laundering late last year, are seeking a new trial. Following crypto exchange FTX’s collapse,…

Sam Bankman-Fried appeals conviction, criticizes judge’s ‘unbalanced’ decisions

OpenAI this week unveiled a preview of OpenAI o1, also known as Strawberry. The company claims that o1 can more effectively reason through math and science, as well as fact-check…

OpenAI previews its new Strawberry model

There’s something oddly refreshing about starting the day by solving the Wordle. According to DeepWell DTx, there’s a scientific explanation for why our brains might feel just a bit better…

DeepWell DTx receives FDA clearance for its therapeutic video game developer tools

Soundiiz is a free third-party tool that builds portability tools through existing APIs and acts as a translator between the services.

These two friends built a simple tool to transfer playlists between Apple Music and Spotify, and it works great

In early 2018, VC Mike Moritz wrote in the FT that “Silicon Valley would be wise to follow China’s lead,” noting the pace of work at tech companies was “furious”…

This is how bad China’s startup scene looks now

Fei-Fei Li, the Stanford professor many deem the “Godmother of AI,” has raised $230 million for her new startup, World Labs, from backers including Andreessen Horowitz, NEA, and Radical Ventures.…

Fei-Fei Li’s World Labs comes out of stealth with $230M in funding

Bolt says it has settled its long-standing lawsuit with its investor Activant Capital. One-click payments startup Bolt is settling the suit by buying out the investor’s stake “after which Activant…

Fintech Bolt is buying out the investor suing over Ryan Breslow’s $30M loan

The rise of neobanks has been fascinating to witness, as a number of companies in recent years have grown from merely challenging traditional banks to being massive players in and…

Dave and Varo Bank execs are coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

OpenAI released its new o1 models on Thursday, giving ChatGPT users their first chance to try AI models that pause to “think” before they answer. There’s been a lot of…

First impressions of OpenAI o1: An AI designed to overthink it

Featured Article

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

TuSimple, once a buzzy startup considered a leader in self-driving trucks, is trying to move its assets to China to fund a new AI-generated animation and video game business. The pivot has not only puzzled and enraged several shareholders, but also threatens to pull the company back into a legal…

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Want it in your inbox every Friday? Sign up here. This week…

Shrinking teams, warped views, and risk aversion in this week’s startup news

Silicon Valley startup accelerator Y Combinator will expand the number of cohorts it runs each year from two to four starting in 2025, Bloomberg reported Thursday, and TechCrunch confirmed today.…

Y Combinator expanding to four cohorts a year in 2025

Telegram has had a tough few weeks. The messaging app’s founder, Pavel Durov, was arrested in late August and later released on a €5 million bail in France, charged with…

Telegram CEO Durov’s arrest hasn’t dampened enthusiasm for its TON blockchain

Martin Casado, a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, will tackle one of the most pressing issues facing today’s tech world — AI regulation — only at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, taking…

A fireside chat with Andreessen Horowitz partner Martin Casado at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Christina Cacioppo, CEO and co-founder of Vanta, will be on the SaaS Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 to reveal how Vanta is redefining security and compliance automation and driving innovation…

Vanta’s Christina Cacioppo takes the stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

On Thursday, cybersecurity giant Fortinet disclosed a breach involving customer data.  In a statement posted online, Fortinet said an individual intruder accessed “a limited number of files” stored on a…

Fortinet confirms customer data breach

Meta has confirmed that it’s restarting efforts to train its AI systems using public Facebook and Instagram posts from its U.K. userbase. The company claims it has “incorporated regulatory feedback” into a…

Meta reignites plans to train AI using UK users’ public Facebook and Instagram posts

Following the moves of other tech giants, Spotify announced on Friday it’s introducing in-app parental controls in the form of “managed accounts” for listeners under the age of 13. The…

Spotify begins piloting parent-managed accounts for kids on family plans

Uber users in Austin and Atlanta will be able to hail Waymo robotaxis through the app in early 2025 as part of a partnership between the two companies. 

Waymo robotaxis to become available on Uber in Austin, Atlanta in early 2025

There are plenty of calendar and scheduling apps that take care of your professional life and help you slot in meetings with your teammates and work collaborators. Howbout is all…

Howbout raises $8M from Goodwater to build a calendar that you can share with your friends

Delhivery claims Ecom Express has inaccurately represented Delhivery’s business metrics when drawing comparisons in its IPO filing. 

SoftBank-backed Delhivery contests metrics in rival Ecom Express’ IPO filing

It was a matter of time, but Apple is going to allow third-party app stores on the iPad starting next week, on September 16. This change will occur with the…

Alternative app stores will be allowed on Apple iPad in the EU from September 16

The U.K.’s antitrust regulator has delivered its provisional ruling in a longstanding battle to combine two of the country’s major telecommunication operators. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) says that…

Three and Vodafone’s $19B merger hits the skids as UK rules the deal would adversely impact customers and MVNOs

Late Thursday evening, Oprah Winfrey aired a special on AI, appropriately titled “AI and the Future of Us.” Guests included OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, tech influencer Marques Brownlee, and current…

Oprah just had an AI special with Sam Altman and Bill Gates — here are the highlights

Antonio Moraes, the grandson of a late prominent Brazilian billionaire, was never interested in joining the family-owned conglomerate of construction companies and a bank. Shortly after graduating from college, he…

XP Health grabs $33M to bring employees more affordable vision care

A crew of four private astronauts made history in the early hours of Thursday when they opened the hatch of their SpaceX Dragon capsule and conducted the first commercial spacewalk. …

Polaris Dawn astronauts perform historic private spacewalk while wearing SpaceX-made suits