Reformation's IPO filing documented 20 consecutive quarters of double-digit revenue growth while generating 90% of revenue from direct-to-consumer channels, according to Retail Dive. The brand has operated profitably for multiple years, contradicting the narrative that DTC-first models must burn cash to scale.
The company built its distribution around owned channels from the start: its own website and a network of branded retail stores. That vertical integration lets Reformation capture full retail margin on nine of every ten transactions. The brand controls customer data, owns the relationship, and avoids the margin erosion that comes from wholesale partnerships or third-party marketplace fees.
The mechanism that makes this work is contribution margin discipline. Reformation sells products with enough gross margin to cover customer acquisition costs and still leave operating profit. The brand's price points—dresses in the $200-$300 range—support this math. Each new customer acquired through paid channels or earned through brand momentum pays back acquisition cost within the first purchase, then contributes pure margin on repeat orders. The filing shows this isn't accidental: the company has sustained profitability for years, meaning the unit economics hold at scale.
Most physical product brands attempting DTC make two errors. They either underprice the product, leaving no room for acquisition cost, or they chase volume before proving the repeat purchase rate. Reformation's result suggests they locked in strong repeat behavior early, which turns customer acquisition from an expense into an investment.
A small physical product brand can run the same play with three moves. First, set product pricing to leave 40% gross margin after landed cost. That margin funds acquisition and provides buffer for discounting. Second, launch DTC-only for the first 12 months. Sell exclusively through your own Shopify store or similar platform. Track cost per acquisition and average order value weekly. The target: CAC payback within two purchases. Third, introduce a repeat purchase mechanism within 60 days of launch. That can be a subscription option, a loyalty points program, or simply a well-timed email sequence offering complementary products. The repeat rate determines whether the model funds itself.
The small brand advantage is speed. Reformation took years to reach this scale. A one-person operation can test the contribution margin model in 90 days with a single product line and $5,000 in Meta ads. If the second purchase arrives predictably, the model scales. If it doesn't, the brand pivots before burning capital on inventory or lease commitments.
The distribution choice sits upstream of almost every other decision. Wholesale and marketplace channels offer faster reach but compress margin and distance the brand from the customer. DTC demands higher upfront marketing cost but preserves margin and builds a defensible customer file. Reformation's filing shows the direct path can work at scale if the unit economics prove out first.