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Launching Poppi during the COVID-19 lockdown forced the company to abandon a traditional retail rollout. Instead, they focused on Amazon and TikTok, allowing them to build a national brand and penetrate "Middle America" soda markets far faster than a typical coastal-focused CPG strategy would have.
In a beverage market dominated by giants like Pepsi and Coke, Poppi's founders recognized that a strategic acquisition was the only path to global scale. They couldn't get into venues like stadiums due to existing contracts, so they intentionally built the company to be an attractive acquisition target.
Despite beverages being a category people rarely buy online, Breeze generated tens of millions in DTC sales. This built a huge base of customers who preferred to buy in-store, creating a powerful demand flywheel. When Breeze launched in retail, it sold four months of inventory in two weeks.
Vaynerchuk's go-to-market plan for his Very Lucky gummies deliberately avoids traditional retail at launch. Instead, he will focus exclusively on direct-to-consumer sales through live shopping platforms like TikTok Shop and Whatnot. This strategy leverages hype and community to build initial traction and demand before engaging with conventional distribution channels.
For emerging brands, the path to retail shelf space is indirect. Instead of pitching buyers, focus on building a powerful direct-to-consumer (DTC) business and capturing the attention of younger demographics online. Retailers, desperate to attract these consumers, will then come to you.
Large CPG players have slow, agency-driven feedback loops. Nimble DTC brands can win by rapidly testing creative, messaging, and offers online, gaining an insurmountable learning advantage. Speed itself becomes the strategic edge, not just a byproduct of being small.
Launching during a downturn can be advantageous. With less competition, a compelling story can gain significant PR traction. Larroudé's founders leveraged the 2020 pandemic when other brands were silent, mirroring the retail boom that followed the 2008 crisis.
Marketing agency Marketex developed a digital product for a public speaker to reach audiences who couldn't attend live events. When COVID-19 canceled all in-person speaking, this pre-existing digital offering became an immediate, seamless pivot, demonstrating that expanding market reach can double as a powerful contingency plan.
Traditional barriers to entry like retail distribution and expensive TV ads have been dismantled by social media and e-commerce. Small brands can now achieve massive sales and build nine-figure businesses without ever entering a big-box store, leveraging platforms like TikTok and Shopify.
Instead of a traditional big-bang retail launch, Magic Mind first sold direct-to-consumer (D2C). This allowed for 150+ product iterations based on direct customer feedback, ensuring product-market fit *before* scaling into high-stakes retail channels, a strategy borrowed from software development.
An unexpected viral TikTok with 2M views forced founder Chelsea Branch to immediately build an e-commerce store and email list. This "done is better than perfect" approach captured momentum that a more deliberate, perfectionist launch plan would have missed, proving that action trumps planning when opportunity strikes.