Contemporary womenswear brand Toccin is growing internationally by running private shopping events and trunk shows ahead of opening physical retail, according to Glossy. The brand uses invitation-only gatherings in target markets to test demand, build customer files, and generate immediate revenue before committing to lease terms.
The mechanism is full-look selling in a controlled environment. Toccin stages trunk shows in hotel suites, private clubs, or partner boutiques, showing complete outfits rather than individual pieces. Customers buy multiple items per visit because they see how pieces layer and travel. The brand collects contact information, purchase history, and sizing data at each event, building a CRM before opening a store. When Toccin does open retail in that market, it already has a customer base and knows which styles move.
This works because it collapses the discovery-to-conversion cycle. Traditional retail expansion requires signing a lease, staffing a store, and waiting for foot traffic. Trunk shows flip the sequence: the brand enters a city, reaches its best prospects through local influencers or existing customers, and sells immediately. The event format creates urgency—limited inventory, one-day access—so conversion rates run higher than open retail. Toccin also avoids the fixed costs of unsold inventory in a new market. If a city responds weakly, the brand exits without a lease penalty. If demand is strong, the private events have already covered part of the rent.
The full-look presentation drives higher average order value. When a customer sees a complete outfit styled by the brand, she buys the outfit, not just one piece. Toccin's product is designed for this: cohesive color palettes, layerable separates, trans-seasonal fabrics. The trunk show is the ideal format because a sales associate can walk a customer through three or four complete looks in thirty minutes, then adjust based on her response. That same customer in a traditional store might browse alone and leave with a single item.
A small physical-product brand runs the same play with minimal budget. Pick one new city or customer cluster. Partner with a local boutique, co-working space, or wine bar that will host a two-hour event for a percentage of sales or flat fee under $500. Invite 30-50 people via email, DM, or referral from existing customers in that area. Offer early access to a new collection or limited colorway not available online. Style products in complete sets—if you sell candles, show three scents as a layered home routine; if you sell bags, display a travel kit with wallet, pouch, and tote as one system. Collect email and mobile at check-in. Give attendees a 10% discount for buying multiple items that day. Follow up within 48 hours with photos from the event and a link to reorder. Run two events in the same city before deciding whether to invest in local retail or pop-up presence. Track names, order values, and repeat rate. If 30% of attendees return for a second purchase within 90 days, the market justifies deeper investment.
Toccin's model proves that physical retail expansion does not require capital-intensive store rollouts. The trunk show de-risks geography, builds customer files, and generates revenue from day one. For a brand shipping physical product, the event is both marketing and distribution: the customer discovers, touches, and buys in the same interaction. That compressed cycle is the reason private shopping drives international growth faster than traditional retail.
The takeaway
Private trunk shows let physical brands test new markets, sell immediately, and build customer files before committing to retail leases.
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