Stripes Beauty entered four Ulta stores in early 2024. Six months later, the Naomi Watts-founded menopause care brand stood in 448 locations, according to Glossy. That 112-fold expansion is the fastest shelf-gain in the category this year, and it happened without a celebrity blitz or a nine-figure media spend.
The play: Stripes ran a contained test in a handful of doors, collected basket and velocity data the retailer could underwrite, then used that proof to negotiate the national rollout. The brand entered Ulta with a narrow assortment — cooling mists, vaginal moisturizers, overnight serums — and let the transaction data speak. When the reorder rate and attachment behavior cleared internal benchmarks, Ulta greenlit the expansion. Stripes delivered the same SKU set to each new door, eliminating the assortment negotiation that stalls most regional rollouts.
Why it worked: Retailers expand shelf space when the risk-to-revenue ratio compresses. Stripes gave Ulta a clean data package from the pilot stores — sales per square foot, units per transaction, repeat rate — and framed the national rollout as a low-risk duplication of a proven result. The brand also entered a white-space aisle. Menopause care sits between skincare and wellness, a merchandising gap that gave Ulta a category story to own. Stripes became the vehicle for that story, and the retailer moved fast to lock it in before a competitor filed the same space.
The confined pilot also de-risked inventory. Stripes shipped small quantities to the four test doors, monitored sell-through weekly, and adjusted the pack size before scaling. When the national order came, the brand knew exactly how much stock each door could move in 90 days. That precision keeps chargebacks low and reorders predictable, two metrics that determine whether a retailer expands you or cuts you.
The steal: If you manufacture a physical product and want a regional or national retail chain, run a paid pilot with the smallest possible footprint. Approach the buyer with a proposal: three to five doors, 90 days, you cover the cost of any unsold inventory. That removes the retailer's risk and gets you live data. During the pilot, track basket size, attach rate, and reorder frequency. Pull weekly POS reports if the retailer allows it, or run intercept surveys in-store to capture customer behavior. At day 75, compile the data into a one-page brief: revenue per door, sell-through rate, and the comp-store projection. Use that brief to negotiate the regional expansion.
Keep the assortment narrow. Stripes entered with five or six SKUs, not twenty. Fewer SKUs mean faster inventory turns, cleaner merchandising, and simpler reorder logic. If you're a small brand, start with your two best sellers and one hero product. Let the retailer see clean velocity on three items before you pitch the full line. Once you're in more doors, use the retailer's own sell-through data to justify line extensions. That keeps the conversation anchored in their numbers, not your optimism.
Budget the pilot as a customer acquisition cost. If you spend $8,000 to cover unsold inventory across five test doors and convert that into a 200-door order, the CAC per door is $40. Compare that to the cost of cold-pitching a buyer or hiring a broker. The pilot is cheaper and faster, and it builds the proof the retailer needs to say yes.
The broader pattern: Retailers are hunting for category-defining brands in underdeveloped aisles. Menopause care is one. Men's grooming, sustainable home goods, and functional snacks are others. If your product opens a new merchandising conversation, lead with that in your pitch. Stripes didn't sell Ulta on another skincare line. It sold the retailer on owning the menopause aisle before Target or Sephora moved. That urgency accelerates decisions and opens budgets.
The takeaway
Stripes scaled to 448 Ulta doors by proving demand in four stores first, then pitching the expansion as a low-risk duplication.
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