On July 4, 2026, Trumpdrive Energy put its new Jupiter Matcha Lychee SKU live on its own website and on Walmart.com at the same time, according to PR Newswire. The brand did not stage a DTC test-and-learn period, nor did it grant Walmart an exclusive window. Both channels opened simultaneously.
The mechanics are straightforward. Trumpdrive committed inventory to Walmart's fulfillment network and posted the same SKU on its own Shopify storefront, launching both URLs on a single date. The brand accepted the operational load of managing two order streams, two customer-service inboxes, and two pricing environments from day one.
The move works because it decouples validation from distribution. A DTC-first launch lets a brand prove demand before approaching retail, but it also means the brand absorbs all acquisition cost and owns the entire customer file during the riskiest weeks. A retail-first launch outsources discovery to the retailer's traffic but surrenders pricing control and customer data from the start. Dual-channel go-live splits the difference: the brand captures margin and email on its own site while Walmart supplies volume and credibility. If one channel stalls, the other provides a revenue floor. If both move, the brand has two negotiating positions when it approaches the next buyer.
The pricing latitude matters more than it appears. Walmart enforces a price-match expectation; if a shopper finds the same SKU cheaper elsewhere, the marketplace loses trust. But a brand can still test a higher DTC price if it bundles differently—three-packs versus singles, subscription versus one-time—or if it uses the DTC site to sell a variant Walmart does not carry. Trumpdrive can learn what customers will pay when discovery cost is zero, then use that ceiling to inform the wholesale rate it offers the next retailer.
A small physical-product brand runs the same play with a marketplace that requires no upfront inventory commitment. List the new SKU on Amazon or eBay the same day you launch your own site. Use Fulfillment by Merchant on Amazon or print-on-demand through a three-PL so you hold stock in one location and fulfill both channels from the same bin. Set your DTC price 5 to 8 percent higher to cover acquisition cost, and use the marketplace listing as proof of placement when you pitch your first wholesale account. The brand that launches Jupiter Matcha Lychee today and sees 40 percent of week-one revenue come from its own site knows it can afford to pay for cold traffic. The brand that sees 80 percent come from the marketplace knows it has a discovery problem and should spend the next quarter building an audience before it orders the second production run.
Write the product detail page once and duplicate it across channels, adjusting only the ship speed and return policy to match each platform's requirements. Budget $200 to $400 for the first inventory commitment if you are using a light three-PL and print-to-order for ancillary SKUs. Track contribution margin by channel in a single spreadsheet so you know which lane pays for the next production lot. When the first wholesale buyer asks for an exclusive, you already have sell-through data from two sources and a credible reason to say no.