FindMine for Shopify: What It Costs and the Best Self-Serve Alternatives
In short: FindMine is an enterprise outfitting platform. It builds Complete the Look content at scale and pushes it to your website, your emails, and your ad feeds from one engine. It is good at this. It is also sold the enterprise way: there is no Shopify App Store listing, no public price, and no install button. Getting FindMine onto a Shopify store means a sales call and a custom integration. If you have an enterprise catalog and a budget line for this, book the demo. If you run a Shopify fashion brand and want styled looks live this month, self-serve apps like Angadi, elfai, and Byte install from the App Store with the price printed on the listing.
Full disclosure: Angadi is our product. We will keep the comparison honest anyway, because the differences here are mostly about access and price, and those are easy to state plainly.
What FindMine does
FindMine sells one idea, executed across many surfaces: build the outfit once, then show it everywhere the shopper meets your brand. Their marketing claims the system generates Complete the Look guidance for around 95% of a catalog, with looks meant to be indistinguishable from ones a merchandiser assembled by hand.
The surfaces are the interesting part. A FindMine look is built to travel. The same outfit content flows into email campaigns and into ad catalog feeds, so a shopper who sees a jacket in an Instagram ad can see it styled into a full look before ever reaching the site. Directory listings describe integrations with SAP, Oracle, Salesforce, Shopify, Facebook, and Instagram.
Their proof points are enterprise proof points. The best-known one is a vendor-reported A/B test with Tractor Supply Company showing a 2.66% lift in average order value from Complete the Look placements. Vendor-reported means exactly that: directional, produced by the party selling the software. But it is a real named customer running a real test, which is more than most tools in this category can show.
How FindMine actually gets onto a Shopify store
This is the part the marketing pages skip, so here it is.
FindMine is not in the Shopify App Store. Search for it there and you will find apps with similar names that have nothing to do with outfitting. What FindMine has instead is a "FindMine for Shopify" page on their site and a demo Shopify storefront showing their widgets running on a Shopify theme. So the integration exists and works. The path to it runs through their sales team.
That path looks like enterprise software because it is enterprise software: a demo call, a scoping conversation, a contract, and an integration project where FindMine's team wires their engine into your storefront. There is no 30-day trial you start yourself and no uninstall button that ends the relationship in one click.
None of this is a criticism. Plenty of serious software is sold this way, and for a brand doing eight figures with a merchandising team, a managed integration may be exactly right. It just means the question "should I use FindMine on my Shopify store" is really the question "am I an enterprise buyer," and most Shopify fashion brands are not.
Enterprise vs self-serve
The two buying models, side by side:
| Enterprise | Self-serve |
|---|---|
| Sales process | Install button |
| Quote pricing | Public pricing |
| Custom integration | Theme app extension |
| Procurement | Minutes |
| Best for 100k+ SKU catalogs | Best for Shopify brands |
Neither column is wrong. They are built for different buyers, and knowing which column you shop in settles most of this decision before any feature comparison.
What it costs
FindMine does not publish pricing. Software directories that profile the product list pricing as available on request, which in practice means it is negotiated per contract. Public reporting on enterprise outfitting platforms generally puts this category in five figures per year and up, but we have not seen a verified FindMine price and will not invent one. If you get a quote, you will know more than the internet does.
Compare that with the App Store side of the category, where the price is a public fact on the listing page. As of July 2026: Byte Lookbook runs around $8 a month with 117 reviews. elfai starts at $14.99 with a small review count. Angadi has a free plan and a Pro plan at $59. You can dislike any of those numbers, but you can read them without talking to anyone.
The pricing page test
A quick way to understand this market: go looking for the price.
| Platform | How you get it | Pricing | Shopify App Store reviews |
|---|---|---|---|
| FindMine | Sales call, custom integration | Quote only | Not listed |
| Stylitics | Sales call, enterprise contract | Quote only | Not listed |
| Angadi | App Store install | Free plan, Pro $59/mo | New, few reviews |
| elfai | App Store install | From $14.99/mo | 5.0 (2 reviews), as of June 2026 |
| Byte Lookbook | App Store install | ~$8/mo | 5.0 (117 reviews), as of June 2026 |
The table maps access rather than quality. FindMine and Stylitics are more capable platforms than any self-serve app on this list, ours included. The table describes access: two of these you can evaluate on your own store this afternoon for the cost of an install, and three of them you cannot.
What FindMine does that self-serve apps do not
Being honest about the gaps matters more in a post like this one, so here they are.
Outfit content in ad feeds. FindMine can put styled looks into your Meta catalog ads, so the outfit sells the product before the click. No self-serve Shopify outfit app does this today, Angadi included. If paid social is your main acquisition channel and you want outfit creative there, FindMine is offering something the App Store is not.
Store associate tooling. FindMine extends looks to in-store teams, which matters if you run physical retail alongside the site. Self-serve apps are online-store products.
Scale and track record. FindMine has run on large enterprise catalogs for years and has named customers willing to appear in case studies. Angadi launched in 2026 and is early, with few reviews. If you need a vendor who has already survived a Fortune 500 procurement process, that is FindMine's column.
What the self-serve side offers back is speed and reversibility. You install, style your catalog, watch what it earns through attribution, and cancel if it does not. The evaluation costs an afternoon instead of a procurement cycle.
Which should you use
If you are an enterprise brand with physical retail, a paid social budget, and a merchandising team: talk to FindMine, and talk to Stylitics while you are at it, since they compete for the same contracts.
If you are a Shopify fashion brand that wants hand-picked looks and has time to build them manually: Byte Lookbook, proven and cheap.
If you want AI-generated outfits on a small budget: elfai.
If you want AI styling plus revenue attribution so you can see what the looks actually earn: Angadi. That is our product, so weigh the source, then check the free plan and decide on your own numbers.
FAQ
Is FindMine available in the Shopify App Store? No. FindMine integrates with Shopify through a custom, sales-led integration. They maintain a Shopify demo store, but there is no public App Store listing to install from.
How much does FindMine cost? FindMine does not publish pricing. Directories list it as quote-based, negotiated per contract. If cost matters to your decision, the only way to learn it is to book their demo.
Does FindMine work for small Shopify brands? The integration can technically run on Shopify, but the sales-led model, custom integration work, and enterprise contract structure are built for large catalogs and teams. Most independent Shopify brands will find the self-serve apps a better fit for how they buy software.
What is the closest self-serve alternative to FindMine? It depends on which part of FindMine you want. For AI-built outfits on product pages with measurement attached, Angadi is the closest match among App Store apps. For manual look building, Byte Lookbook. Nothing self-serve currently replicates FindMine's outfit ads in Meta feeds.
Is FindMine better than Stylitics? They are direct competitors selling to the same enterprise buyers, and both are quote-priced, so a real answer requires quotes and demos from both. From the outside, FindMine leans harder on multi-surface distribution of looks, and Stylitics leans on its data and personalization stack. If you are choosing between them, you are an enterprise buyer and should make them compete.
Can I test outfit merchandising before committing to an enterprise platform? Yes, and it is a reasonable strategy: install a self-serve app, run it for a quarter, and use the attribution numbers to decide whether outfit content earns enough on your store to justify an enterprise contract later.
Angadi builds complete outfits from your catalog and places them on every product page. It installs free on Shopify with a 30-day trial, and nothing goes live without your approval. See it on your store →