Solbari appointed Grayson Davis as head of sales concurrent with its U.S. wholesale expansion, according to Yahoo Finance. The Australian UPF 50+ sun-protection apparel brand moved directly into specialty retail rather than building direct-to-consumer volume first, reversing the standard physical-product market entry sequence.
The brand manufactures clothing certified to block 98 percent of UV radiation, addressing a clinical need category where certification carries regulatory weight. Solbari targeted specialty retail accounts across the U.S. with a dedicated sales executive from launch, structuring for retail partnerships as the primary growth channel rather than treating wholesale as a mature-stage revenue diversification.
The play works because sun protection sits at the intersection of medical necessity and daily wear. Dermatologists prescribe sun-safe clothing for patients with photosensitivity conditions, transplant recipients on immunosuppressants, and melanoma survivors, creating clinical referral paths into retail. UPF certification is a binary standard verified by textile testing, not a marketing claim, which gives buyers confidence and eliminates the sampling friction that slows most apparel wholesale. A specialty retailer can stock certified UPF garments alongside adaptive clothing and post-surgical wear without education overhead, and the customer arrives already informed by a provider.
The hire-first structure signals channel commitment. A head of sales on payroll before retail accounts are signed forces the company to build for wholesale economics: minimum order quantities, keystone pricing, terms that accommodate retail buyers, and inventory depth to fulfill reorders. Brands that treat wholesale as an afterthought typically underprice their DTC channel, cannot support retailer margins, and show up with insufficient stock to sustain shelf presence. Solbari inverted that risk by making the sales role foundational.
A small physical-product brand in a certified category can run the same structure at fractional scale. Identify a functional product attribute with third-party verification: GOTS organic certification for baby textiles, ANSI cut-resistance ratings for kitchen gloves, ASTM toy safety for wooden goods. Build wholesale pricing from the start, assuming 50 percent retail margin, and approach independent specialty stores where the certification solves a buyer problem. A $4,000 monthly retainer to a part-time sales representative who works three regional trade shows and carries your line alongside two others will open 15 to 25 doors in six months if the product has verifiable differentiation. Skip Instagram. Print linesheet PDFs with certification logos above the fold, terms on page two, and reorder minimums clearly stated. The rep pays for themselves when six accounts reorder.
The certification provides the speed. Wholesale buyers for specialty retail evaluate hundreds of brands monthly and default to no on most. A product with documented third-party standard compliance moves faster because the buyer can defend the decision internally and the attribute communicates immediately on the shelf. Solbari's UPF rating is printed on the garment and understood by the customer before the associate speaks. That reduces retail training cost and shortens the sell-through cycle, both of which improve buyer confidence at contract signature.