Bylt, a men's basics brand built on fit and fabric, announced seven new store openings this year alongside a wholesale partnership with Bloomingdale's, according to Retail TouchPoints. The company is executing a controlled expansion into physical retail while maintaining its direct channel, betting that owned stores and selective wholesale distribution deliver customer acquisition and unit economics that pure digital can't match at scale.
The brand is opening locations in targeted markets while placing product in select Bloomingdale's doors, not flooding every department store chain. Bylt is keeping control of the store experience and picking wholesale partners that align with its customer profile, avoiding the margin trap that killed earlier DTC-to-wholesale attempts. The owned stores give the brand full control over merchandising, staffing, and customer data; the Bloomingdale's placement gives it access to a different shopper without building that traffic from scratch.
This works because physical retail solves three problems digital brands hit at scale. First, customer acquisition cost online has doubled since 2019 for apparel, making every new customer unprofitable until repeat purchase. A store in a high-foot-traffic location acquires customers at the cost of rent and labor, often $30-50 per new buyer versus $80-120 online. Second, returns drop when customers touch product before buying — apparel return rates run 20-30% online versus 8-12% in-store, per industry averages. Third, wholesale puts product in front of customers who will never click a Facebook ad but will buy a $48 t-shirt if they see it folded on a table at Bloomingdale's.
Bylt is running the selective expansion model, not the blanket rollout. Seven stores in one year is deliberate — enough to test markets and build operational muscle, not so many that the brand loses control of execution. The Bloomingdale's deal is a partnership, not a wholesale blitz, meaning Bylt likely negotiated placement, merchandising input, and data access rather than just shipping units and hoping. Brands that survive wholesale keep control of how the product is presented and which doors it enters. Brands that don't end up with their $68 hoodie on a clearance rack next to a $19 knockoff.
The steal for a small physical-product brand is the test-and-control model. You don't need seven stores and a department store deal to validate the play. Start with one owned retail location in a market where you already have customer density — use your Shopify backend or email list to see where orders cluster. Negotiate a 3-12 month lease on 500-800 square feet in a high-foot-traffic area: a downtown corner, a weekend market, a mall kiosk. Staff it yourself or hire one part-timer. Track cost per new customer (rent + labor divided by new emails captured) and compare it to your Facebook CAC. If the store customer is cheaper and repeats faster, open a second location. For wholesale, ignore the big chains and pitch 3-5 regional specialty retailers that already sell to your customer. Offer them 45-50% margin, not the 55-60% department stores demand, and ask for end-cap placement and a 90-day test. If it moves, expand. If it sits, pull it and keep the margin.
The broader pattern is that DTC brands are done pretending digital is enough. The ones that survive the next three years will look like Bylt: owned stores in targeted markets, selective wholesale with margin control, and a direct channel that feeds both. The era of digital-only scale is over.
The takeaway
Bylt runs owned stores and selective wholesale to cut acquisition cost and control margin — the DTC digital-only model is dead at scale.
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