Every time you open Instagram, you’re likely hit with an ad from a brand you’ve never heard of, showcasing a beautifully photographed product that’s sold only online. Welcome to the age of “direct-to-consumer,” or DTC—the name that’s been assigned to the digitally native businesses that now dominate your social feeds and have replaced traditional brands in the closets and cupboards of your home. Lately, rumors have been swirling of DTC’s demise, in press coverage of individual companies as well as the category at large. But I think these proclamations are missing the point, which is that these businesses aren’t defined by their model, but by their values.
When we started our brand-development firm, Red Antler, in 2007, our vision was to partner with entrepreneurs to launch and grow businesses through the lens of the brand. From the start, we worked with many companies that were introducing new business models into the world of e-commerce: One Kings Lane, Birchbox, and Rent the Runway, to name a few. And then, in 2010, we observed as a little eyeglass business called Warby Parker came on the scene.
This story is from the May - June 2020 edition of Inc..
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This story is from the May - June 2020 edition of Inc..
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