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For brands with both physical and wholesale channels, physical stores should serve as marketing assets. Instead of scaling the number of locations, invest heavily in making a few stores so visually appealing and experience-driven that customers are compelled to share on social media, generating free buzz.

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Best Buy is leveraging its massive physical retail footprint as a unique advertising channel. This "in-store takeover" capability allows brands to create immersive experiences using window displays, digital walls, and interactive screens, reaching customers at the crucial point of purchase.

Contrary to common belief for online-native brands, Peak Design's own retail stores have the highest contribution margin. This is because shipping products in bulk freight to stores is cheaper than covering the high last-mile delivery costs for individual e-commerce orders, which often qualify for free shipping.

Sephora combats intense competition by applying a "game of inches" philosophy to its physical retail space. Every section, from teen-focused fragrance displays to strategically placed checkout-line minis, is optimized to sell. This meticulous space utilization creates a highly profitable, frictionless customer experience without any "wasted" space.

Digitally-native baby registry Babylist is opening physical stores not just for in-person sales, but as influencer-ready content studios. By building stores with stages and podcast studios, they create a marketing engine that generates social media content to reach a national online audience, justifying the high cost of a physical footprint.

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.

A great retail experience goes beyond transactions. Successful brands like Lululemon create "retail theater" by hosting local events like yoga classes in their stores. This builds community and brand loyalty, generating higher long-term ROI than focusing purely on daily sales per square foot.

Province of Canada found their retail store didn't just add a new sales channel. It significantly boosted online orders in a radius around the location and solidified their status as a 'local business,' which was critical for surviving the pandemic through community support and curbside pickup.

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.

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.

After years of global e-commerce success, Gymshark's strategy for sustainable growth is omnichannel expansion. The core goal is increasing "physical availability" through stores and partnerships, making the brand more accessible and allowing new customers to experience the product firsthand before buying.

Use a Few 'Irresistible' Flagship Stores as Marketing Hubs, Not Your Primary Growth Engine | RiffOn