Most brands set up a Faire storefront, optimize their photos, and wait. A few brands treat Faire as a transaction layer they feed from the outside. Those two groups have very different results. This is about the second group.
The brands that figure this out early are the ones with numbers worth talking about.
When Faire launched, the pitch was simple: list your products, retailers find you, you grow. And for a while, with enough novelty and a less crowded platform, that worked for some brands. It works less and less now. There are too many brands on Faire and not enough buyer attention to go around if you're just sitting there.
The brands doing real volume on Faire are not waiting for the algorithm. They are driving traffic to Faire from outside Faire. They identify stores they want to work with, build the relationship through their own outreach, and then bring that retailer onto Faire to place the order. Faire becomes the place where the transaction happens cleanly: net 60 terms, payment insurance, easy reordering. That's what it's best at.
Think of it this way. Faire is the best wholesale infrastructure tool available right now. Net terms handled automatically. Payment protection on every order. Simple reorder flow for buyers. A clean interface retailers already know. It removes friction at exactly the moment you need friction removed most, right when a buyer is ready to commit.
But infrastructure doesn't generate leads. You do.
Faire is where the order happens. The relationship that made the order possible was built somewhere else entirely.
Find the store. Build the fit. Bring them in. In that order.
The model is simple and very few brands actually run it consistently. You identify stores you want to work with. Not randomly, but because you've done the work to understand their aesthetic, their price point, their buyer, and why your product makes sense on their shelf. Then you reach out cold. Email, Instagram, phone if you have a number. You build the conversation. You send samples if it makes sense. You answer questions. You follow up without being annoying.
When the buyer is ready, you send them your Faire direct link. They connect. They place the order. The transaction is clean, the terms are protected, and Faire takes a much smaller commission on direct connections than on marketplace discovery. You pay less, you control the relationship, and you keep the margin that matters.
That's the whole model. It sounds obvious. Almost nobody does it at any real volume because it requires something most brands want to avoid: daily, relentless, unsexy outreach work. Not a campaign. Not a quarterly push. Every day. New stores identified, new emails sent, new relationships started.
Numbers from a brand running the outside-in acquisition model full time, with Faire paid marketing as an additional layer. The visit growth reflects outside acquisition driving qualified traffic. The conversion rate reflects buyers arriving already warm.
From cold store to active account. What every step looks like in practice.
This is not a one-time campaign. It's a workflow you run every day until it becomes automatic. The stores you contact today might place a first order in three months. The ones you contacted three months ago might reorder today. The pipeline is always moving at multiple stages at once.
10 new stores identified and emailed. 5 follow-ups on existing outreach. 2 relationship touchpoints with active accounts. That's the floor. It takes about 90 minutes if you're organized. The brands doing this every day are the ones with pipelines that never run dry.
Getting a store on Faire is the beginning, not the goal.
A first order is not a win. It's a starting point. The actual value of a wholesale account is in the reorders. The second, third, fifth order from the same buyer who now trusts your product and makes space for it every season.
Most brands celebrate the first order and disappear until they want money again. The buyer places one order, hears nothing, and when reorder time comes they've already moved on to a brand that stayed in touch. This is the most common way wholesale relationships die and nobody talks about it.
The image bank matters more than most brands realize. When a retailer has great photos of your product, they use them. They post on Instagram, they update their website, they put you in their email newsletter. Every time they promote your product, they're selling through faster. Faster sell-through means sooner reorder. The image bank is not a courtesy. It's a sell-through accelerator.
The check-in after delivery is what separates a transaction from a relationship. Most buyers have never had a brand ask how the product is performing. It's a low bar to clear. Clear it and you're already ahead of most of your competition.
The brands with the highest reorder rates are not the ones with the best products. They are the ones who stayed in touch, gave buyers the tools to sell, and made reordering feel like the natural next step.
Faire's messaging tool is underused by most brands. You can message any retailer you're connected with directly inside the platform. Use it. Not to sell. To serve. Answer questions quickly. Acknowledge new orders. Send a note before a trade show. It takes three minutes and it keeps your name in front of the buyer between orders.
It works best when the pipeline underneath it is already healthy.
Faire offers paid marketing tools: promoted placement, featured brand status, category boosts. They work. They drive visibility to buyers already on the platform who might not have found you otherwise. For brands with a strong conversion rate and a polished storefront, they're worth running.
But paid marketing on Faire amplifies what's already there. If your storefront is weak, your photography is generic, and your products aren't converting organic visitors, spending money on promoted placement will just accelerate the disappointment. Fix the foundation first.
The right moment to turn on Faire's paid tools is when your organic conversion rate is healthy and your outside-in pipeline is producing consistent new connections. At that point, paid visibility adds a second acquisition channel on top of a machine that's already running. The two compound well together.
The brands doing real volume on Faire are almost always running both. Outside acquisition bringing direct connections in at lower commission. Paid marketing capturing the buyers they didn't reach directly. The platform works hardest when you're feeding it from both sides.
Your storefront conversion rate should be above 8% before paid traffic makes sense. If it's below that, the spend will expose the problem without fixing it. Check your photography, your product descriptions, your pricing versus category benchmarks, and your minimum order structure. Fix what's broken. Then amplify.
Faire is the best wholesale infrastructure available. It does not generate leads on its own. The brands winning on it are doing the work outside, identifying stores, building relationships, sending samples, following up, and bringing those buyers onto Faire to close the transaction cleanly.
Then they stay in the relationship. Image bank. Check-in. New launch email. Reorder prompt at the right time. Every account, every season, without stopping.
The Faire ROI Calculator on twenty3.tech breaks down your real return per account once commissions, terms, and acquisition cost are factored in. Free. No account required.
Open the Faire ROI Calculator →Written by the team at TWENTY3 Intelligence. Operational perspective from direct experience running wholesale across gift and lifestyle brands on Faire and direct channels.
Published by TWENTY3 Intelligence. Free resource library at twenty3.tech.