The post
A baker shares a tray of cinnamon rolls. A meal prep seller posts next week's menu. A pop-up drops a pickup window.
Our story
OrderPost started with a simple belief: the post you already made should be enough. Not another store setup. Not a catalog. Not a long night copying orders out of DMs.
A baker shares a tray of cinnamon rolls. A meal prep seller posts next week's menu. A pop-up drops a pickup window.
Orders arrive as comments, DMs, screenshots, Venmo notes, and half-finished questions while the seller is still baking.
OrderPost turns that same post into a tiny order system: items, pickup times, custom questions, and a link customers can use.
The food, the work, the pickup note, the familiar name in the Instagram bio. That is the main character. OrderPost is just the quiet layer that keeps the order from getting lost.
Why this exists
We kept seeing the same pattern. A small seller would make a beautiful post, customers would get excited, and then the actual ordering part would scatter everywhere.
One customer asks for the price. Another wants pickup at five. Someone sends payment without a name. Someone else comments "need two" and disappears into the thread.
OrderPost is for that exact moment. It reads the post, drafts the order page, and asks the seller to confirm the details before anything is published.
The seller should review everything before it goes live.
A customer order page should feel personal, not like a giant checkout.
Small sellers deserve tools that fit the way they already sell.
A post is not messy marketing. It is the storefront.
Tell us what you sell, where orders get messy, and what would make your next drop feel lighter.
Email hello@orderpost.storea note from the receipt drawer
OrderPost is for