Perhaps you have heard that The RealReal, an online consignment shop for luxury goods, has filed for an initial public offering under the ticker “REAL.” Ok, fine, so far so what? Well, the company’s founder and CEO is Julie Wainwright.

For those of you who did not immediately emit an ultrasonic shriek, Wainwright was the CEO of Pets.com, which went bust less than a year after its IPO in 2000. Pets.com’s infamous failure is still used as a synecdoche for the collapse of the 1990s Silicon Valley bubble. “It failed, and I became sort of a pariah,” Wainwright said, according to a CNBC report in 2017. “I was the dumbest person in the Valley. It was a little tough.”

Wainwright insists that Pets.com was a good idea that was ahead of its time, and she might be right. After all, Petsmart bought Chewy.com in 2017 for $3.35 billion.

Anyway here’s the deal with The RealReal: it’s consignment at scale, with goods sold in a few brick-and-mortar stores and online. If you own, let’s say, a Chanel purse and you’ve decided you don’t want to wear it anymore, you can drop it off at a RealReal store or mail it to the company. It will then authenticate the bag and resell it.

The RealReal’s revenue grew 55 percent in 2018 to $207.4 million, from the year before. But The RealReal lost $75.8 million overall in 2018, also an increase over the $52.3 million loss in 2017.

Here are my questions: