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This Article is From Jan 12, 2021

In Blow to Retailers, Pandemic Made OnlineĀ Upstarts Even Stronger

DigitalĀ brands looked headed forĀ a reckoning a year ago, withĀ bloated valuations, rising advertising costs and ever more competition.

Then the Covid-19 pandemic hit the U.S. and gave a giant gift to brands that mainly sell directly through the web. With their brick-and-mortar competitionĀ shuttered and the virus raging, Americans flockedĀ online and loaded up on home goods, comfy clothes and much more. And this wasn't just 20-somethings, but pretty much everyone.

This helped remove a big hurdle to continued growth for direct-to-consumer brands: finding new customers. The bulk of these businessesĀ got off the ground by flooding social media with ads targeted at younger shoppers. This created a winning formula and digital brands flourishedĀ last decade.

However,Ā they increasingly faced rising marketing costs as brands selling everything from subscription toothbrushes to cleaning services poured cash intoĀ courting the same young cohort. That led many to try to pushĀ into the mainstream by opening stores and advertising onĀ television orĀ through direct mailĀ to win shoppers it couldn't reachĀ online. Covid helped on this front, too, because industriesĀ hit hard by the pandemic, such as restaurants and travel, slashed advertising. ThatĀ brought down ad rates on the webĀ and in traditional media, creatingĀ a bigĀ opening for smaller brands.Ā 

ā€œAt a point, these brands either move into the mainstream or fizzle out,ā€ said Sonal Gandhi, chief product officer for The Lead, a researchĀ and eventsĀ firm focused on e-commerce. Because of the ā€œpandemic and everyone going online, they can reach the older customers they couldn't before.ā€

This isĀ another blowĀ for legacy retailers and brands—many of which have been hammered by theĀ store closures and recession triggered by Covid. The 10Ā largest public U.S. companies that are eitherĀ clothing retailers or department stores collectively hadĀ $38 billion ofĀ revenue wiped out lastĀ year, or about a quarter of their 2019 sales,Ā according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

At Mack Weldon, an underwear and casual basics brand based in New York, the opening in ad markets helped create a boom in new customers during the fourth quarter, according to chief executive officer and founder Brian Berger. And that included gains among senior citizens.

The pandemic ā€œcreated lasting growth implications for our business,ā€ Berger said.

Covid also got Mack Weldon, which has annual revenue of more than $50 million, into television for the first time. The company did it cheaply, using a freelance producer toĀ createĀ a spot in houseĀ with previously recorded customer testimonials. In the fourth quarter, itĀ doubled its television budget and plans to keep up that spending early this year.Ā 

ā€œThat was a big win for us,ā€ Berger said.

The Lead included Mack Weldon in itsĀ Foremost 50, a list of direct-to-consumer brands it sees as positioned to have staying power and challenge incumbents. The past five years showed that starting a digital brand became easier with the increased automation of digital advertising, but few have broken out.

ā€œWe found a ton of new customers.ā€

Many of these brands have taken on investment from venture capital and other sources, which is why there was so much hand-wringing when their prospects to either go public or be acquired faded. And that's why this moment could be so crucial, according to The Lead's Gandhi.Ā 

Not only do these brands have an opportunity to push into a new demographic or part of the country, but they are luring older customers who are often more loyal. Many have shopped at the same stores for decades and could be as devoted to a digital brand they trust, she said.Ā 

ā€œThe crossing over into the mainstream has been facilitatedā€ by the pandemic, Gandhi said.

At Tecovas, a western wear brand based in Austin, Texas, the pandemic sapped demand for its handmade cowboy boots—not as many occasions, like concerts or weddings, to wear them, according to CEO and founder Paul Hedrick. But even with the industry down 30%, the company boosted sales about 10% last year because of its acumen in digital advertising, he said. A big help was that itsĀ marketing cost per customer declinedĀ by about a quarter.Ā 

ā€œWe found a ton of new customers,ā€ Hedrick said, partly crediting the drop in digital ad rates. ā€œThere were tailwinds in reaching consumers more cheaply.ā€

Tecovas also stuck with its plan on physical stores and opened seven in the U.S. after the pandemic hit, more than doubling its total. While it didn't get any great deals on leases because they were signed months in advance,Ā cheaper rents may be a boon for the brands that go into brick and mortar, said Hedrick, who left a career in private equity to start Tecovas in 2015. He sees the past year as a reset for the direct-to-consumer market.Ā 

ā€œOver theĀ last 12 months, a lot of peopleĀ came to their senses,ā€ said Hedrick, whose company also made the Lead's list. ā€œValuations came down to earth. There was a flurry of enthusiasm that got overly enthusiastic.ā€Ā 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

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