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“You learn something every day if you pay attention." - Ray LeBlond
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Proper Tack #55 - 19.02.07

DTC is a Channel, Not a Company


Major brands are obsessed with cultivating Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) businesses. Venture capitalists are putting hundreds of millions of dollars into single product companies that only sell online. But meanwhile the cost to acquire an ecommerce customer is only going up, and Amazon is taking an ever-increasing share of online purchases.

In this edition of Proper Tack, I'll cover the shifting landscape for DTC companies, and why the most successful of them are using DTC as a learning machine that helps power traditional distribution.

📦  DTC is a part of the future of commerce, but companies who believe it is a singular reason for being, rather than a distribution channel, are likely to miss out on the full opportunity.

🔖  Fear not, even with a single-topic essay newsletter on the way, we'll still end this edition with a few amusing articles to close out your week.

If you want to help support Proper Tack, please forward this newsletter to anyone you think would enjoy it and ask them to sign up here.

This entry's header palette is GG.


1. What Direct-to-Consumer Really Means


Direct-to-Consumer is not a company descriptor, and companies should not think of themselves as "a DTC company."

DTC is a channel that companies can use to launch and iterate on products in a way that traditional retail doesn't allow. Companies can test marketing channels, test customer messaging, test audience targeting, test personas, test value propositions, test product features, test related products and services, basically anything you want.

DTC is a strategy that allows a company to maintain full contact with their customers and total control over the experience. You take an order from the customer, send them an order confirmation email, pack and ship the box to them (which you designed), and follow up with additional messaging about usage recommendations, warranties, and customer support. Not only that, but now the company can directly reach out to this person in both the digital and physical worlds with additional messaging.

But DTC is not the final form of a company. That's not to say a purely DTC company can't be wildly successful, but the model still has its limits.

For one thing, Amazon makes up nearly 50% of all ecommerce activity in the US as of 2018, and captures over half of all ecommerce related searches. That means that companies are immediately competing against a behemoth with infinite reach and product assortment for any purchase. And that means that to truly scale and be successful you have to grow brand recognition to keep potential customers from defaulting to Amazon.

Marketing

To date, many of the most successful DTC brands have grown by hammering home ads on Facebook, YouTube, and increasingly Instagram. If you've opened the Instagram app lately, it's hard to sum up the experience better than Dan Seifert did. 



But because it has been so successful, there are two major downsides to this strategy now. 

First, because people have seen it power growth for DTC brands, everyone immediately flocks to it. And now that there are well over 400 startups building DTC companies, these channels get crowded quick, making it harder for you to stand out.

Second, it is getting more expensive to reach large scale audiences on these channels. Part of this is because of what you see in problem one, more competition. But part of this is also due to the diminishing returns you will see on almost all paid channels when doing direct response marketing.

Your best potential customers are going to be the cheapest to acquire. This makes sense because your product should be designed to fit their needs perfectly. The CPCs and CPMs may be higher than you would benchmark, but the increased conversion rate and average order value will likely more than compensate for that. However, as you start to expand your target audience it's going to be harder to convert those fringe prospects. In short, your 10,000th customer is going to cost more on Facebook than your 1st.

Because of this, you see DTC brands investing more in TV ads. Peloton spent over $140M on TV in 2018; Leesa spent $73M. Each of those brands sell products that will cost hundreds or thousands of dollars to purchase, but it's not just high-dollar products making this shift. ThirdLove, a women's underwear brand, spent over $13M on TV in 2018.

A national commercial buy is going to cost somewhere on the order of $1M to $2M for a 6-week run, and that's not going to put you in prime time by any means. So the smaller companies need to find other ways to pull this off successfully. Lucky for them, and you, there is a growing list of ways to reach customers through "addressable TV" advertising. That article is focused on what is happening in the UK market, but there are options in the US as well. Hulu, for instance, will do marketing buys that start as low as $30,000 and allow much of the same geographic, demographic, and interest targeting that people have come to expect from pure digital platforms.

I don't want to confuse the point by saying that TV is a strategy every brand should employ, but for DTC companies to truly scale they need to build a brand, not just a product, that will attract and retain customers. Video tends to be uniquely suited to tell that story, but all content options should be on the table.

Distribution

Telling a more engaging story across more channels will absolutely help drive sales through a branded ecommerce channel. However, the benefit of that marketing doesn't have to end there. Increasing brand awareness and connection also offers companies the chance to drive sales through partner channels, both online and offline. So how do digitally native brands look to extend their distribution?

Well one quick option is expanding into other online marketplaces. The biggest example here is Amazon, but there are numerous others that may be more focused on specific customer types/expectations (Overstock, Etsy) or industry verticals (Newegg, Wayfair). But it's worth noting that even as the percentage of purchases happening online continues to climb, ecommerce retail sales have yet to pass 10% of total retail sales in the US. And again, 50% of those sales are happening on Amazon.

Meanwhile, total US retail sales were somewhere on the order of $5.4 trillion last year. That's a lot of zeroes, and a lot of opportunity. Chubbies, UntuckIT, Warby Parker, Nest Bedding, and numerous others have decided to attack this opportunity with branded physical store locations. In fact, it's become so common for some of these brands that malls are actively recruiting DTC companies to open new locations. On the other end of the spectrum, you have DTC brands working with major physical retailers. Harry's razors are distributed in Target. Kylie Cosmetics are sold at Ulta.

Casper is one of the most interesting examples. They have focused on growing a number of different distribution channels, and are the leader in an extremely competitive (and honestly heavily commoditized) space accordingly. Casper has their own branded physical locations, a distribution deal with Target, and, in what was one of the most surprising to me, Casper mattresses are for sale on Amazon.

They've got a lot of smart people over there, so I'm sure they made the calculation that this is good for business, but here are the factors I would consider when making a similar decision.
- Selling through Amazon means Casper is taking an obvious reduction on margins compared to casper.com. This is a similar scenario to the margin reduction a brand would see by selling at wholesale prices to a retailer.
- The big difference is that now you are competing with a major ecommerce company on their turf. Some customers will be more comfortable buying things in store, so a physical presence will help you convert them. Selling on Amazon may help you convert people who go there to look for a mattress, but you lose the customer relationship for someone who was already predisposed to make a purchase like that online.

Final Points

I'm a big believer in the concept that strategy is what you say "no" to. Launching with DTC is a strategy where you say "no" to the traditional distribution model, and focus on a channel that gives you more control over the customer experience and makes it easier for you to test. Often it also means companies saying "no" to multiple products until they can figure out how to make the perfect version of and marketing message for one product.

As your company matures, strategy changes. Understanding when that means expanding beyond a single owned distribution channel into partner channels, and how your marketing needs to evolve to support that is critical.

 

More Good Articles to Sound Interesting


Because there's always a great opportunity to impress someone with your encyclopedic knowledge of both the useful and the bizarre.

🎨  Since this entire email was about DTC, it's interesting that I came across 2 new DTC paint brands this week: Backdrop and Clare. These brands have VERY different aesthetics, so it'll be interesting to track how they each do. 

🏄  You can now go to a luxury resort/surf school that features a dozen cameras capturing your every move on the water. “It’s the school for surf nerds — but it’s the coolest nerds you’ve ever met.”

🌶️  Chipòtles are just dried and smoked jalapeños?! Guajillos are mirasols?! Everything you didn't know about about peppers in one handy image.

🚀  This one is homework for you; An Argument Against Silicon Valley's Favorite Growth Strategy. I have a lot of thoughts about this, and will be devoting the next email to it. Just this article is about 9,000 words though, so I'm giving you time to digest it.

Thanks for making it through another ProperTack email. Please forward on to anyone who would enjoy it.

See you next time.
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