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The Stash Edge · Intelligence Desk HENRI IV

The Cycle landed 370 Sprouts stores by pitching the buyer's priorities first, not the product

The menstrual wellness brand won shelf space by solving the buyer's placement dilemma before the SKU conversation.

Published June 4, 2026 Source Modern Retail From the chopped neck
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The Cycle
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HENRI IV · June 4, 2026

The Cycle landed 370 Sprouts stores by pitching the buyer's priorities first, not the product

The menstrual wellness brand won shelf space by solving the buyer's placement dilemma before the SKU conversation.

The Cycle, a menstrual cycle-synced beverage brand, secured placement in 370 Sprouts Farmers Market locations by reversing the typical retail pitch sequence, according to Modern Retail. Instead of opening with product features, founder Alix Traeger led with where the drinks should live on the shelf and why that placement solved a merchandising problem the buyer already had.

The brand pitched Sprouts buyers on placing the drinks in the wellness section rather than competing for space in the crowded functional beverage aisle. According to Modern Retail, Traeger framed the product as a bridge between supplements and beverages, a category the buyer was already trying to define. The pitch included planogram suggestions and margin structure that fit Sprouts' existing wellness floor plan. The buyer said yes to the placement strategy before committing to the SKU count.

This worked because retail buyers operate under two constraints: space scarcity and category performance metrics. A new SKU in functional beverages competes with dozens of established brands and eats margin on a per-door basis. A wellness placement, by contrast, solves a buyer's task of filling an emerging category with differentiated inventory. The Cycle didn't ask the buyer to choose between their product and another drink. They asked the buyer to solve a merchandising gap the buyer was already paid to fill. The product became the solution to the buyer's problem, not another line item in an overcrowded set.

The steal: before you pitch a buyer, map the three hardest merchandising problems in their category. Call the store, walk the aisles, check LinkedIn for buyer pain points in trade interviews. Then rebuild your pitch as the answer to one of those three problems. For The Cycle, the problem was: where do we put menstrual wellness products that aren't supplements or period care? For your product, it might be: how do we fill the gift-under-twenty set without candles, or how do we differentiate the counter impulse buy without adding another snack brand.

Write the pitch deck in this order: the buyer's problem, the category gap, your product as the fix, then the planogram or margin structure that makes it easy to say yes. Lead with a one-page placement map showing where your product lives on the existing floor plan and what it replaces or complements. Include a two-sentence category trend cite from SPINS or Nielsen that proves the gap is growing. Then show the product.

Test the pitch on a small regional chain first. Offer them exclusive placement in exchange for a six-month test and point-of-sale data you can bring to the next buyer. The Cycle used this approach to prove the wellness placement thesis before Sprouts committed to 370 doors. You can run the same sequence with a 10-store independent co-op, then use the per-door sales number in your deck when you pitch the larger chain. The buyer's job is to reduce risk. You reduce risk by showing them the answer and the proof before you ask for the order.

The broader pattern: winning retail placement is less about product differentiation and more about solving the buyer's category management problem. The brand that names the problem and builds the solution into the pitch wins the meeting. The product is the proof, not the pitch.

The takeaway
Name the buyer's merchandising problem first, then pitch your product as the category solution with a planogram in hand.
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retail placementbuyer pitchcategory managementwellness beveragesshelf strategysprouts
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