Nest New York launched in the United Kingdom not through its own Shopify store, but by landing distribution at Harrods, Selfridges, Cult Beauty, and specialty retailer John Bell & Croyden, according to Digiday. The fragrance brand chose multi-channel retail partnerships as the entry mechanism, betting that association with established premium retailers would accelerate consumer trust and trial in a new geography more efficiently than a standalone direct-to-consumer push.
The brand brought its fragrance-layering strategy to the U.K. market through these partnerships, positioning its products inside stores and online channels that already command attention from the target customer. Cult Beauty carries the line on its e-commerce platform, while Harrods and Selfridges provide physical retail presence in London. John Bell & Croyden, a heritage pharmacy and beauty retailer, adds specialty channel depth. Each partner serves a distinct shopping occasion, from discovery browsing to destination purchase.
This works because premium retail partnerships solve three problems at once for a physical-product brand entering a new market. First, they provide instant social proof: a customer unfamiliar with Nest New York sees the brand on a Harrods shelf and infers quality from the retailer's curation. Second, they compress the customer acquisition timeline by placing product in front of an existing, qualified audience already shopping the category. Third, they reduce the working capital burden of building standalone infrastructure — no need to fund a local warehouse, customer service operation, or paid media budget large enough to overcome zero brand awareness. The retailer absorbs those costs in exchange for margin.
For a smaller brand, the play is to identify which retail partner in your target geography has the customer you need and the willingness to test new suppliers. Start with specialty retailers, not department stores. A boutique candle brand entering the U.S. from abroad should approach retailers like Trudon stockists or niche home goods stores that already carry premium fragrance, not Nordstrom. Prepare a one-page line sheet with product photos, wholesale pricing, minimum order quantity, and lead time. Include a single sentence explaining why your product fits their existing assortment. Email the buyer directly — most specialty retailers list buyer contacts on their trade pages or respond to inquiries sent to a general trade email. Offer to send a sample set at no cost, shipped overnight if the retailer is within your region. Once one retailer commits, use that placement as proof in your pitch to the next. A brand entering Canada with one boutique in Toronto can tell the Vancouver retailer it is already stocked in Toronto, converting the first win into leverage. Budget $200 to $500 for sample shipping and $1,000 to $2,000 for initial wholesale inventory per retailer, depending on order size.
The broader pattern is that premium physical-product brands often move faster by earning shelf space than by building their own. Retail partnerships are not a fallback when DTC fails; they are a deliberate distribution strategy that converts someone else's customer base and credibility into your growth engine. Nest New York chose this path as the entry vector, and the brand is now positioned inside the U.K.'s most recognized luxury retail environments without spending a year and a six-figure budget to build that presence alone.