I've sat on both sides of the buyer meeting - as the brand pitching and as the advisor helping buyers evaluate brands. The gap between what founders think buyers want and what buyers actually care about is enormous.
Most founders walk into buyer meetings armed with sell-through projections and Instagram follower counts. Buyers care about those things, sure. But they're table stakes. Here's what actually tips the decision.
Content readiness
Buyers at Sephora, Boots, Space NK - they all have the same problem. They need content for their own channels: website hero images, email features, in-store POS, app placements. When a brand can hand over a fully loaded asset library on day one, it signals professionalism.
I've watched brands lose listings because they couldn't deliver the right image dimensions for a retailer's homepage feature within 48 hours. That sounds absurd, but it happens constantly.
Have your assets ready in every format before you walk into the meeting. Better yet, share a digital asset library link in your pitch deck.
Marketing support - specifically, what you'll fund
Buyers want to know your marketing plan for their stores, not your marketing plan in general. Will you fund sampling? Co-invest in a promotional endcap? Run targeted paid media driving traffic to their site?
The magic words are: "We've allocated budget specifically for your channel." That tells a buyer you understand how retail partnerships work.
Data transparency
The best brand-retailer relationships are built on shared data. Buyers want to know you'll share your DTC insights - what's selling, which demographics are converting, what messaging resonates. In return, they'll share sell-through data that helps you optimise.
Brands that hoard their data or, worse, don't collect it properly, make buyers nervous. It suggests the brand is flying blind, and that means risk.
Operational reliability
Can you fulfill orders accurately and on time? It sounds basic, but fulfilment issues are the number one complaint buyers have about indie brands. Late deliveries, incorrect quantities, missing documentation - these create real costs for retailers.
Before your pitch meeting, have your logistics partner confirmed, your EDI setup tested, and your compliance documentation complete. A buyer who trusts your operations will give you more grace on everything else.
A genuine sell-through story
Buyers are pitched hundreds of brands a year. The ones that stand out have a clear, honest answer to: "Why will this sell in my stores?"
Not "because it's clean beauty" - every brand says that. Not "because we have 500k followers" - followers don't guarantee basket adds. A genuine answer sounds like: "Our average customer is a 28-year-old woman in London spending £35 on skincare monthly. Your Covent Garden store indexes heavily in that demographic. Here's the DTC data showing our conversion rate with that audience."
Specifics beat superlatives every time.
The relationship doesn't end at the PO
Getting listed is the beginning. Buyers track your performance weekly. They notice when you're proactive - sending updated assets, sharing campaign plans, flagging potential stock issues early.
The brands that keep their listings are the ones that make their buyer's job easier, consistently, for years. That's not glamorous. But it's how you build a retail business.