Try GOLD - Free
The Future of DTC Is…Boring?
Entrepreneur
|September 2020
Brandless was a hot company with a bad business model, like many of its direct-to-consumer peers. Now it’s back as a quieter company focused on slower growth. Is this what DTC needs?
Not many people know the name Ryan Treft. That’s just fine with Ryan Treft.
“I don’t plan on hitting the speaking circuit,” he says. “I’d rather be behind the scenes.” It’s served him well so far. Treft has been behind some great direct-to-consumer success stories—stories you also may never have heard of because they didn’t get much press and weren’t awash in investor money. But they made money. Lots of it. Which was the point.
Now Treft has bought a brand many people have heard of: It’s Brandless, the onetime DTC company that raised nearly $300 million (much from the notoriously growth-hungry SoftBank) on the promise of selling cheap, everyday goods to millennials. It launched in 2017 to massive praise, and further turned its co-founder and CEO, Tina Sharkey, into a business celebrity. Brandless rose as part of a cadre of buzzy, deep-pocketed DTC brands—like Casper and Outdoor Voices—that spent heavily on growth and seemed to be on meteoric rises. Then, in the past year, the narrative changed. Casper revealed that it lost more than $60 million in each of the past three years; Outdoor Voices reportedly lost $2 million a month and parted with its high-profile founder, Tyler Haney; and Brandless went out of business.
What went wrong? The general takeaway from business experts is this: When brands raise a ton of money and spend it on growth, all while discounting their product, they may boost their profiles and increase sales—but it’s an unsustainable game. Now, especially as finances have tightened during the pandemic, it may no longer be a game investors want to play.
This story is from the September 2020 edition of Entrepreneur.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur US
Your 5 New Favorite Things
With Emmy Award-winning tech expert Mario Armstrong's top finds, your 9-to-5 will have more joys and fewer frustrations-and your downtime will benefit too.
2 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
AUTOMATE YOUR CUSTOMER SERVICE
Want to drive more business with less work—but still keep it personal? We asked a digital marketing expert who specializes in hyperlocal businesses for his top recommendations.
2 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
OUR BEST-EVER PROMOTION
Want to draw new customers to your business? Take inspiration from these shops on our list, who share their greatest attention-getting ideas.
3 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
DEALING WITH ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY
Many small businesses are feeling the impact of tariffs and other policy changes. Here's how they're managing.
2 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
'There's No Days Off'
What does it take to compete at the highest level? Billionaire Mark Cuban and NFL star Micah Parsons have the answers.
5 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
My Biggest Change as a Leader
Mindset shifts are hard, but they can be the key to success. We asked six business leaders how they began to look at things differently.
2 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
WHAT TOP PERFORMERS HAVE IN COMMON
Every franchise has a top-performing franchisee who drives the most business. These people tend to share two key qualities: a willingness to do the dirty work, and a purpose far bigger than profit.
10 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
HOW TO BUY A LOCAL BUSINESS
Want in on the mom-and-pop-shop life? It's easier (and more profitable) than you might think.
4 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
I SOLD MY SMALL BUSINESS. NOW WHAT?
Building a local business is hard. But saying goodbye isn't easy either. Here's what I learned—and what every small business owner should know.
5 mins
September - October 2025
Entrepreneur US
She Owns a $12 Million Staffing Franchise
After watching her mother run businesses in Indonesia, Josephine Suryono knew she'd one day do the same-just on a different continent.
2 mins
September - October 2025
Translate
Change font size
