Milani, the mass cosmetics brand distributed through Target, Walmart, and CVS, has posted 19 consecutive quarters of growth by treating retail shelf space not as real estate to rent but as a development partner to collaborate with, according to Glossy. CEO Mary van Praag credited the result to a strategy of co-developing products and bundles directly with retail buyers, building exclusives that deepen the brand's category footprint and give each retailer a reason to allocate more linear feet.
The mechanics are straightforward. Milani works with each retail partner to design products or bundles tailored to that chain's customer profile and merchandising calendar. The brand supplies the formulation and packaging expertise, the retailer supplies the customer data and shelf commitment, and the resulting SKU exists only in that chain. The exclusivity gives the retailer a reason to feature the product in endcaps or promotional windows, and Milani secures incremental shelf space without competing against its own core line.
This works because it solves the central tension in mass retail beauty: buyers want differentiation without risk, and brands want distribution without commoditization. A co-developed exclusive resolves both. The retailer gets a product it can promote without triggering a price war across chains, and the brand gets guaranteed placement and promotional support because the buyer now has skin in the outcome. The collaboration also generates proprietary sell-through data that Milani uses to inform the next product cycle, creating a compounding advantage in category understanding that generic distribution cannot replicate.
The underlying mechanism is the shift from transactional distribution to strategic partnership. When a brand simply sells finished goods to a retailer, the relationship is arm's length: the buyer orders what moves, cuts what does not, and allocates shelf space to whoever offers the best terms that quarter. When the brand co-develops product, the relationship becomes operational. The buyer is now a collaborator with a vested interest in the success of a specific SKU, and the brand earns influence over merchandising decisions that would otherwise be opaque. The 19 quarters of sustained growth reflect the cumulative effect of these deeper partnerships across multiple retail banners.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play at modest scale. Start by approaching a single retail account where you already have placement and reasonable sell-through. Propose a exclusive bundle or variant built around an upcoming promotional window: back-to-school, holiday gifting, a seasonal refresh. Offer to co-develop the product based on the buyer's customer data and merchandising calendar, and position it as a test with limited initial inventory. The pitch is simple: we will build something you can feature without cannibalizing our core line, you get exclusivity and a story to promote, we get incremental shelf space and deeper insight into your customer. Start with a six-month commitment and a single SKU. If it moves, expand the partnership and repeat the model with your next-largest account.
The cost is contained. Co-developing an exclusive does not require new tooling if you work within your existing manufacturing capabilities: a different colorway, a bundled set, a seasonal package variant. The incremental expense is the product development time and the inventory commitment, both of which you control by starting small and scaling only after the first test delivers sell-through data. The return is not just the revenue from the exclusive SKU but the strategic positioning it creates: you move from vendor to partner, and that shift unlocks access to buyer intelligence and promotional support that transactional relationships never generate.
The broader pattern is that physical-product brands win shelf space by making the retailer's decision easier and more defensible. An exclusive collaboration gives the buyer a reason to say yes that survives the next quarterly review, and it creates a moat that competitors cannot easily cross because they lack the operational relationship you have built. Milani's 19 quarters of growth are the compounding result of that dynamic, repeated across multiple retail banners and product cycles.
The takeaway
Co-develop exclusive SKUs with retail partners to turn shelf space into a strategic partnership that delivers sustained growth.
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