Dr.Melaxin launched in the UK exclusively on TikTok Shop and generated £19 million in sales before securing permanent placement across 196 Boots stores nationwide in under a year, according to Retail Times. The Korean skincare brand bypassed conventional retail pitching by using platform transaction data as qualification for brick-and-mortar buyers.
The brand ran its entire UK entry through TikTok Shop first, building sales history and customer concentration maps before approaching physical retail. Boots reviewed the TikTok Shop sales volume, repeat purchase rate, and geographic density, then committed to a national rollout. The retailer placed Dr.Melaxin into nearly 200 doors without the brand running traditional sampling programmes, trade shows, or multi-quarter buyer negotiations.
This worked because buyers now treat platform sales as primary demand proof. A brand that moves £19 million on TikTok Shop in its first year demonstrates customer pull that retailers can convert with zero marketing spend. The transaction data also showed Boots which postcodes generated the highest order frequency, reducing the risk of stocking locations with low interest. Dr.Melaxin delivered a ready audience and let the retailer capture margin on existing demand rather than building awareness from scratch.
A small physical-product brand can replicate this sequence on a tighter budget. Launch one hero SKU on TikTok Shop and run paid creator partnerships at £200–500 per post targeting UK postcodes near your target retailer's stores. Track which postal districts generate repeat orders, then package a one-page sell sheet showing transaction count, average order value, and a heatmap of customer concentration. Approach regional buyers at Boots, Superdrug, or independent pharmacy chains with 90 days of platform sales data and propose a test rollout in the top five performing regions. Position the pitch as risk transfer: the retailer stocks proven demand instead of gambling on a cold launch.
For a solo founder, budget £3,000–5,000 for three months of creator content and TikTok Shop ads, then convert the sales file into a retailer pitch deck. Larger brands with in-house teams can accelerate by seeding 10–15 creators simultaneously and using TikTok's first-party attribution to show buyer demographics and purchase intervals. Procurement teams sourcing for corporate gifting or events can reverse the play by identifying TikTok Shop sellers with high transaction velocity in relevant categories, then negotiating direct wholesale terms using the platform data as leverage for volume pricing.
The broader pattern is platform-to-physical as the new trade route. Retailers now view online marketplaces as unpaid product testing labs, and brands that generate dense sales in target geographies earn shelf space without traditional marketing support. Dr.Melaxin proved demand before asking for distribution, and Boots captured an established customer base without funding a launch. Run the numbers on a platform, then trade the data for doors.