What should beauty founders fix before retail?

Before approaching retail, fix your fulfilment reliability, your sell-through story, and your in-store support capability. Retail does not create problems - it amplifies the ones you already have. A brand with inconsistent stock, no training materials, and nothing driving footfall will struggle on shelf regardless of how good the product is.

Why this matters

Most founder-led brands underestimate how operationally demanding retail is. The pitch is the easy part. What comes after - weekly sell-through reporting, staff training, replenishment management, buyer communications - requires systems your DTC business probably does not have yet. Getting listed before those systems exist means you are building them under pressure, while also trying to perform.

The brands that survive their first range review are the ones who treated retail readiness as a project before they ever walked into a buyer meeting. They knew their fulfilment lead times. They had a training pack ready on day one. They were already tracking sell-through at their existing stockists and could show a buyer what that trajectory looked like. That preparation is what separates a brand that gets reordered from one that fills a shelf for six months and quietly disappears.

Common mistake

Getting listed before your ops can support it

The excitement of a retail listing can make founders move faster than their operations can handle. Short shipments, late deliveries, and no consumer-facing support content are the three fastest ways to end up on a buyer's problem list. If you cannot fulfil consistently and report cleanly right now, add three to six months of operational groundwork before you start pitching. Listing too early damages the relationship and your brand's reputation in a category.

What good looks like

You can fulfil a retailer's opening order and two replenishment orders without strain on your supply chain

Sell-through data from any existing stockist is clean, available, and tells a positive story

A staff training pack exists and any sales associate could be briefed in under 20 minutes

You have a consumer-facing marketing plan that includes the retailer - social content, PR, in-store events

Packaging communicates the product's point of difference clearly without anyone needing to explain it

You have a named person internally who owns the retail relationship and reporting week to week

Practical next steps

1

Audit your fulfilment process for its weakest point - lead times, minimum quantities, packaging quality - and fix that first

2

Pull sell-through data from every current stockist and build a one-page performance summary you would be comfortable sharing with a buyer

3

Write your staff training pack before you need it - product education, usage, key talking points, FAQs

4

Map out a 90-day activation plan for any new listing: what consumer-facing activity will you run to drive footfall and awareness

5

Set up a weekly reporting template so your buyer receives proactive updates from day one, not silence until the range review

SL
Retail is not a growth strategy on its own - it is a distribution channel that rewards brands who show up prepared. The groundwork you do before listing is what determines whether you are still on shelf two years later.

Sophie Lansbury, Founder of Beauty 2.0

Related service

Retail Ops

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