Morning Brew - ☕ New flames

Otherland founder Abigail Cook Stone dishes on building her brand.
Morning Brew August 30, 2022

Retail Brew

OpenStore

Good afternoon. Pumpkin spice lattes are back at Starbucks. If you’re desperately clinging on to the last few weeks of summer, you can pretend you didn’t read that.

In today’s edition:

—Maeve Allsup, Jeena Sharma, Katie Hicks

CORPORATE STRATEGY

Passing the smell test

A collage of colorful Otherland candles with founder Abigail Cook Stone. Illustration: Francis Scialabba, Photos: Otherland

Entrepreneurs are no strangers to skepticism. Haven’t all the greats been told their idea had insurmountable barriers? For Abigail Cook Stone, whose digitally-native candle brand Otherland is scattered across gifting guides in Vogue and Cosmopolitan—and who herself can be spotted sharing her skin care routine in Glamour Magazine—the biggest roadblock wasn’t the product, but the channel: How do you sell scent, the strongest trigger of memory and emotion, through the internet? How do you get a customer over the hurdle of buying before smelling?

Stone, an art history and architecture grad who worked as an art buyer for Ralph Lauren, decided selling scent online was about…well, art. And storytelling. And, perhaps surprisingly, it involves a physical gathering space.

Digital scent sales are personal

Stone started Otherland in 2018, with unusual scents like Canopy (California fig, ivy greens, and summer dew) and Chandelier (champagne, saffron, and leather).

But nostalgia-fueled scent descriptions alone weren’t enough to pull consumers into a digital olfactory experience strong enough to convince them to buy a $36 candle they’ve never smelled. To do that, Stone turned to her background in design, and harnessed the power of the tiny screen.

  • Otherland’s differentiator is being visually stimulating and creating stories around scents that it hopes evoke a memory or an emotion in a buyer—like Tomato Terrazo, which smells like “heirloom tomato, celery salt, [and] leafy vines”—rather than a single scent, like grapefruit or rose, Stone said.

Host with the most: When Stone opened Otherland’s first brick-and-mortar location in Manhattan this summer, community was top of mind.

Stepping into the Otherland store isn’t like walking through the stately shelves of Sephora or Nordstrom (which both sell Otherland candles.) It’s more like stepping into the pastel and cotton candy-fueled board game Candy Land, or into Otherland’s own Instagram feed. In other words, it’s really, really colorful.

“It’s kind of a clubhouse approach to a retail store, and that I think is really important in strengthening your brand's community,” Stone said. “It’s everything to us.”

Keep reading here.MA

        

TOGETHER WITH OPENSTORE

Sell like Miguel

OpenStore

Thinkin’ about cashing in on your e-commerce biz? Here’s how Miguel up there pulled off a million-dollar payday when he sold his Shopify shop, Jack Archer, to OpenStore.

Miguel’s entrepreneurial spirit first took him from selling snacks on the streets of Costa Rica to organizing a chain of hardware stores to even operating a sushi restaurant.

But when he began researching hundreds of reviews and write-ups about common frustrations with men’s pants and underwear, Miguel decided to design the perfect-fitting pant and launch his first e-comm store: Jack Archer.

Six months later, he clicked this little link here and got a cash offer from OpenStore within 24 hours. BOOM . He accepted, and the money hit his bank account in just two weeks.

Curious about what your Shopify store could sell for? Take two seconds to fill in your deets and receive an offer in 24 hours.

        

LUXURY

Once more, with feeling

Cher Horowitz shopping Paramount Pictures

Gen Z lives in the side-hustle economy, often juggling full-time roles with short freelance gigs or even online businesses.

Add luxury resale to the list of side hustles that’s become a lucrative option the younger generation is turning to, as the cost of living continues to skyrocket. Or so says The RealReal’s latest luxury resale report. According to Bloomberg, the online consignment marketplace noticed a 50% uptick on items, like skirts and watches, resold on its site during the first six months of the year. These goods were purchased by Gen Z customers at a lower price with the purpose of selling them at a higher price. Reselling luxury is certainly not a new trend. But it has picked up among the always-online generation mainly as a means to be more financially secure, said Hana Ben-Shabat, CEO and founder at Gen Z Planet, a research advisory firm that works with businesses hoping to target Gen Z customers.

  • “This is a generation that grew up hearing constantly about wealth and income inequality and they have experienced two recessions at a very young age, and, of course, the whole effect of a global pandemic,” she told Retail Brew. “If you take all these effects…they want to secure their financial future, and they will do everything they can to do that…In addition to jobs, going to school, reselling items is just part of that. It’s another kind of side hustle.”
  • She added that since the group has grown up with social media, Gen Z often has a good eye for which brands are desirable and are on top of trends, and that makes this cohort extra efficient at the process of reselling.

Keep reading here.JS

        

TOGETHER WITH OPENSTORE

OpenStore

Get a price for your store in 24. Time to move on? With OpenStore, you can get a price for your Shopify-based e-commerce store in just one day. Just answer a few short questions to get your cash offer and collect payment in 1–2 weeks. Take the first step here.

        

BRAND MARKETING

Learning moment

collage of images from Rare Beauty CMO Katie Welch's TikTok Illustration: Francis Scialabba, Photos: @katiewelch/TikTok

In talking to Marketing Brew’s Katie Hicks, Rare Beauty CMO Katie Welch shed light on how she became an online mentor to young marketers and beauty executives:

One of the most common questions Welch said young marketers ask is how to be a CMO like her—something she didn’t know she wanted to be early in her career.

“I was clearing voicemails off of an answering machine at Victoria’s Secret Beauty, making sure that all the stores had enough Love Spell [perfume],” she said. “Did I know that I was going to one day be a CMO of beauty brands? Heck no.”

Keep reading here.

        

SWAPPING SKUS

Today’s top retail reads.

Family affair: In many ways, Dillard’s is on a different path from other department stores. It’s still a family business in some sense, with the founder’s son at the helm, and analysts are predicting a “softer landing” for the company than its peers, like Macy’s and Kohl’s, when it comes to spending slowdowns. (Retail Dive)

Claim to fame: The trend of celebrities partnering up to sell their used clothing online is targeting Gen Z’s desire for authenticity, and a backlash against fast fashion. “They want to align themselves with the tidal wave of where the next generation of consumers want to spend their time and money,” says Alex Goat, CEO of youth-culture specialist Livity. (the Guardian)

Role model: Despite the pressure on the fashion industry from all sides, fashion rentals have been highly resilient and are seeing higher subscriber growth. That’s in part because rental platforms can monetize an item over several years, while retailers could get stuck with inventory. (Glossy)

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Best Buy, which cut its earnings forecast in July, reported a 13% drop in sales in Q2.
  • Fanatics is teaming up with the 2028 Olympic games to offer memorabilia and apparel online and in stores.
  • Fanatics also inked a 10-year omnichannel retail deal with the Baltimore Orioles.
  • Bed Bath & Beyond shares are still on the rise ahead of a much-anticipated strategy and business update.
  • California’s legislature passed a bill that would create a council to establish fast-food industry standards.

FROM THE CREW

Join the Brew’s Business Essentials Accelerator

Join the Brew’s Business Essentials Accelerator

Ready to gain some influence in your career, but not sure where to begin? Learn to make the right decisions faster with the Brew’s Business Essentials Accelerator—an eight-week game changer for anyone looking to quickly advance in the professional space. Apply today and save with code BTS150. Join our September cohort now.

TIME MACHINE

What happened in the world of retail this week in…1893 and beyond? Retail Brew takes you way, way, way back.

  • On August 29, 1893, inventor Whitcomb Judson filed a patent application for a “clasp locker,” which evolved into the zipper.
  • On August 29, 2013, fast-food workers in the US staged a strike over wages.
  • On September 1, 1999, Ty Inc. announced the retirement of Beanie Babies at the end of that year.
  • On September 4, 2012, McDonalds announced plans to open its first vegetarian restaurant in India.

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Written by Maeve Allsup, Jeena Sharma, and Katie Hicks

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