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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.
Early-stage founders can bypass slow, formal buying processes by approaching retailers directly. Jim Cregan of Jimmy's Iced Coffee secured a key listing at Whole Foods by simply walking into their HQ without an appointment and letting the product's compelling design speak for itself.
The company never proactively pitched major retailers. Instead, they focused on creating a powerful digital presence and a superior product. This strategy made the brand so desirable that major players like Sephora initiated the partnership, flipping the traditional wholesale sales dynamic.
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.
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.
Emerging brands often view landing a major retailer as the ultimate goal. In reality, it's the start of a more complex phase involving distribution logistics, trade requirements, and performance pressure. Success depends on staying on the shelf, not just getting there.
To get into a major retailer, don't just prove your product sells. Show buyers data that you bring new customers to their category, growing the entire market rather than just cannibalizing sales from existing brands on the shelf.
Coterie treats its physical retail presence not just as a sales channel, but as a marketing tool. A well-placed product block acts like a billboard, driving discovery and funneling 10-12% of new customers back to their primary D2C subscription business.
With 80% of revenue coming from more profitable D2C sales, Heaven Mayhem views its retail partnerships as a marketing expense. The primary goals are brand alignment, credibility, and reaching new audiences through partners like Selfridges, rather than maximizing wholesale revenue.
For heavy, low-margin products like jarred sauce, a direct-to-consumer model is often unsustainable due to shipping costs. Its strategic value is to build an initial customer base and gather sales data to prove demand to large retailers, de-risking their decision to stock the product.
Before landing major retailers, Buy Rosie Jane used its 50 small boutique partners as a training ground. This 'university' phase allowed them to test messaging, create their own shelf talkers, and define their 'clean' positioning, preparing them for larger-scale success with a fully-formed brand story.