SAN FRANCISCO -

Drive Motors changed its name while collecting $5 million in funding from a trio of sources, including Ally Financial.

According to a recent news release, the provider of digital commerce solutions for some of the world’s largest auto retailers and brands, officially changed its name to Modal and raised $5 million of venture capital. Those funds came from technology investor Peter Thiel, large Japanese dealer conglomerate IDOM and Ally Ventures, the investing arm of the auto finance company.

Modal looks to help dealers and brands to deliver digital transactions inside their existing websites and showrooms. Since launching three years ago, overall volume through Modal’s Checkout product has grown to more than $8 billion, powered in large part by the fact that some of the largest auto retailers in the U.S. now use Modal across hundreds of stores.

Modal’s largest customers report up to 20% gross ecommerce penetration and more than $500 more profit per vehicle from sales via Modal. Last year, Modal doubled its average monthly volume per store to over $1.8 million per month, with top performing stores generating over $10 million per month.

“In the past three years, we’ve grown our customer base from local dealerships to some of the world’s largest auto retailers and brands,” Modal chief executive officer Aaron Krane said. “With our new name and investors, we can build a global brand that shows our focus on technology and design.”

In software terms, the company explained that a “modal” is an interactive window that appears on top of a software application page and keeps the underlying page visible to the user. The benefit of a modal window is that it can create focus on the specific interaction while maintaining orientation within the original experience.

Common examples of modal design include pop-up boxes, chat windows, shopping carts and many more.

“We chose the name Modal because it’s distinct in our automotive B2B market, and it directly communicates our core values,” Krane said. “Modal’s products are designed to generate digital transactions as a transparent part of the retailer or brand’s own experience. We use technology and design to turn the complex car sale into an easy, modal transaction that buyers love.”

The company indicated the additional capital is being used to scale Modal’s commerce platform to meet the needs of its new global customers and to develop new commerce technologies that dramatically streamline the auto purchase transaction.

Modal expects to more than double the size of its teams in its San Francisco headquarters and its regional support offices.

“Our new investors are an exciting combination of technology and automotive leaders,” Krane said. “We entered this industry as outsiders, because most of us came from Silicon Valley, not automotive.

But while that initially felt like a setback, it has become one of our greatest assets. We’re building a team that can modernize auto retail and perhaps redefine auto ownership, too,” Krane went on to say.

More details about the company can be found at www.modalup.com.