Flowers

A bouquet for tonight. Subscribers for next week.

Neighborhood florists across Seoul, live on joayo. For flower lovers, the closing-time bouquet at half price. For florists, the weekly subscribers that make Mondays predictable.

For flower lovers

Fresh flowers, already on your street.

Yangjae market florists, Hannam ateliers, the small shop tucked behind the laundromat — joayo shows them all, with what they've still got and what won't survive tomorrow.

  • End-of-day bouquets

    Around 7pm, florists post the bouquets that won't make it through tomorrow — seasonal mixes, designer leftovers, signature bundles at 40–60% off.

  • Weekly subscription trials

    Dip into a subscription with a 2- or 4-week trial. Hand-tied seasonal bouquets delivered or picked up, no long commitment.

  • Seasonal drops

    Peonies in late spring, dahlias in September, anemones in winter. When the good stuff arrives, joayo tells you first.

For florists

Turn tomorrow's compost into tonight's revenue.

Perishable stock is the hardest part of the shop. joayo lets you move end-of-day bouquets, build a steady subscription base, and turn one-off Valentine's customers into a weekly habit — without deep-discounting your main window.

  • Move perishable stock fast

    Pack end-of-day bouquets from what's still beautiful but won't survive tomorrow. Post at 6pm, gone by 8pm, no compost bin.

  • Build weekly subscribers

    Offer 2-week or 4-week trials that slip naturally into a monthly plan. Subscribers make Mondays predictable and reduce your guessing on order sheets.

  • Seasonal pre-orders

    Peony week, Mother's Day, Pepero Day — run pre-orders that lock in volume before you order stems from the market.

  • Rewards for regulars

    Every visit counts automatically. Fifth bouquet gets a free wrap upgrade, tenth gets a seasonal surprise. Regulars feel known without a CRM.

How florists use joayo

Three moves from end-of-day panic to a predictable week.

  1. 1

    Post end-of-day bundles

    Around 6pm, gather what won't survive to morning. Two taps posts a discounted bundle; buyers come before you close.

  2. 2

    Open a subscription trial

    A 2- or 4-week starter at a comfortable price. Customers test the quality; you learn next week's volume.

  3. 3

    Turn trials into monthlies

    After week two, joayo prompts them to continue. Most do — especially if you included a card with the stem list.

I used to bin about 30,000 won of stems every Tuesday. Now those bouquets leave the shop by 8pm and a third of those buyers are on my subscription list.
P
Park JiwonOwner, Petal Street Florist — Hannam

Questions from florists

  • Very rarely. The people buying end-of-day bouquets aren't the ones who walk in at 2pm for a specific arrangement. They're impulse buyers grabbing something for dinner tonight. Your designed-to-order work keeps full pricing.

Find flowers tonight. Or keep them from wilting.

Whether you want a closing-time bouquet or your Tuesday compost pile has to stop growing, joayo works both sides.

Get the app