The Nue Co., a wellness brand founded on supplements, grew its fragrance sales from 20% of total revenue two years ago to an expected 85% this year, according to Glossy. The shift was driven by the brand's placement in Ulta Beauty stores, which gave fragrance product significant new visibility and trial volume that the brand's direct channel could not match.
The mechanism is distribution leverage, not product innovation. The Nue Co. launched fragrance years ago, but the category remained a minor line until Ulta provided national shelf access. Retail placement created velocity that fed back into inventory decisions, marketing spend allocation, and the brand's own prioritization. The category that moved fastest in-store became the category the brand doubled down on across all channels. Ulta did not create the fragrance business — it amplified an existing SKU set until it dominated the P&L.
This works because retail partnerships change unit economics and customer acquisition in ways that direct-to-consumer channels cannot replicate at small scale. A supplement brand selling online must educate, nurture, and convert cold traffic into a first purchase. Fragrance in a physical retail aisle benefits from browsing behavior, impulse purchase dynamics, and the halo effect of adjacent prestige brands. The Nue Co. gained access to Ulta's 1,300+ store footprint and its established customer base already shopping the fragrance category. The brand did not need to manufacture demand — it intercepted existing demand with a differentiated product positioned in a high-traffic environment.
The lesson for a smaller physical-product brand is that category mix follows distribution, not the reverse. If you have multiple product lines and limited capital, test which SKU moves fastest in the channel with the most leverage, then build inventory and marketing behind that result. Do not assume your founding category is your growth category.
Here is the play for a brand with two to four SKUs and access to one regional or specialty retail partner. First, negotiate a 90-day test placement in 10 to 20 doors. Offer standard wholesale terms but request weekly sell-through data and the ability to restock fast. Second, ship the full SKU range but track velocity by product, not by door. Identify which single SKU turns fastest and has the highest repeat rate. Third, after 90 days, propose expanding distribution for that one SKU only, with a commitment to maintain stock and support it with co-marketing. Fourth, reallocate your own DTC ad spend to the category that won in-store. If fragrance moved and supplements did not, run acquisition creative for fragrance and retarget based on scent preference, not wellness claims. Fifth, use the retail result as proof in pitches to the next retail partner. A 12-week velocity chart from one chain is the most credible signal a buyer will see.
The cost line is manageable. A regional test with 15 doors at $1,200 per door in opening inventory is $18,000 in product at cost, plus freight. Co-marketing might add $2,000 to $5,000 depending on the retailer's program. Total outlay is under $25,000 for a signal that can redefine your product roadmap and your next $100,000 in inventory decisions.
The Nue Co. did not invent a new category. It found the category-channel combination that scaled fastest, then fed it. A physical-product brand with multiple SKUs and one retail partner has the same opportunity — if it tracks the data and bets behind what actually sells, not what it wishes would sell.
The takeaway
Category mix follows distribution leverage: test your SKU range in one retail channel, then build behind the product that moves fastest.
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