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To enter physical retail, first test markets with low-cost local events. Next, 'walk' by running trunk shows and pop-ups with wholesale partners. Finally, 'run' by using short-term leases in retail incubators to validate a location before committing to expensive 10-year leases.

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Platforms like Suppleful (supplements) allow you to test demand for a physical product under your own brand without investing in a large minimum order quantity (MOQ). This dropshipping approach validates the market and marketing angles first, significantly de-risking the eventual move to full-scale production.

To overcome resistance from conservative real estate owners, Metropolis leased its first locations. This allowed them to deploy their technology, gather performance data, and prove the model's value on their own dime, removing the risk for potential partners.

Fashion partnerships allow brands to quickly get physical products to market (6-9 months) and test consumer appetite. The "limited drop" model creates urgency and allows for experimentation—like "tapas instead of a big meal"—without the long lead times of other product categories.

Instead of using retail to build awareness, Manscaped waited until they had massive marketing spend. This ensured customers would specifically seek them out in stores, guaranteeing high sell-through for partners like Target and de-risking the move from D2C to physical retail.

Instead of opening franchises in distant locations, a new franchisor should first build 5-10 locations within a few hours' drive. This strategy, used by successful franchises like Orangetheory, allows for better oversight, support, and testing of the model before a national rollout.

To build a successful franchise, a business must first prove its model is profitable and repeatable. This requires operating three to five corporate-owned stores to perfect unit economics, training systems, brand voice, and operational simplicity before licensing the model to others.

Before committing to a costly lease and build-out for a restaurant, the speaker tested the concept with a delivery-only model from a commissary kitchen. This pre-MVP approach, now known as a cloud kitchen, validated the idea with minimal capital and risk.

For CPG brands, a physical retail presence, even with lower margins, should be viewed as a customer acquisition strategy. It provides crucial visibility and trial, driving customers to your higher-margin direct-to-consumer website for subsequent purchases and retention.

When expanding his law firm, John Morgan uses a 'bullets before bombs' strategy. He first enters a new city with a small, low-cost team and ad budget (the 'bullets') to test viability. Only after seeing positive traction does he commit significant capital and resources (the 'bombs'), de-risking growth.

An unconventional distribution model, like in-person park drops, is a strategic tool for early founders. It creates a rare opportunity for direct, face-to-face feedback on product and purchasing motivation before scaling into retail channels where that intimate customer connection is lost.

DTC Brands Can De-Risk Retail Expansion With a Three-Phase 'Crawl, Walk, Run' Approach | RiffOn