The Buyer Is Not Waiting for You.
Understanding this changes everything about how you pitch.
A retail buyer at Anthropologie, West Elm, or Crate and Barrel is managing hundreds of SKUs, planning 12 to 18 months ahead, and fielding submissions from brands all over the world. They are not looking for a reason to say yes. They are looking for a reason to say no, quickly, so they can get back to the actual job.
The brands that break through are not the ones with the best products. They are the ones that made the buyer's job easier. They showed up with the right product, priced correctly, with a story that fits the buyer's store, in a format the buyer can act on immediately. Every component of a pitch that makes a buyer stop and think, or wait, or follow up for missing information, reduces the chance of a yes.
The pitch is not a presentation. It is a service. You are making it easy for someone to say yes to you.
A buyer sees your pitch for 30 seconds before deciding whether it deserves 30 minutes. Design for the first 30 seconds.
This changes the strategy entirely. Instead of leading with your brand story, lead with the product's role in their store. Instead of sending a full catalog, send the three products most suited to their assortment. Instead of asking for a meeting, give them everything they need to make a decision without one.
The meeting is the reward for a pitch that worked. It is not the goal of the pitch.
Know the Store Before You Contact Anyone.
Unprepared pitches are invisible. Research is the difference.
The most common mistake in retail pitching is contacting a buyer before you understand the store. Walk into three locations if they exist near you. Spend an hour on their website. Understand their price architecture. Know which categories they are building and which they are trimming. Look at what they stopped carrying in the last 12 months as much as what they added.
Then look at your product and ask one question: does this belong here, or do I want it to? Those are very different answers. Buyers can tell in seconds whether a brand has done this work. The pitch that says "I think this would be a great fit for your stores" without evidence is dismissed before the second sentence.
- Price points: what is their opening price, mid, and top across your category? Your wholesale needs to sit inside their margin model.
- Current assortment: who are they already carrying in your category? Are those brands growing or being reduced?
- Aesthetic direction: has it shifted in the last 18 months? New leadership often means new direction. Check who the current buyer or category director is on LinkedIn.
- Channel mix: are they growing online or physical? A retail buyer focused on in-store footprint has different needs than one building DTC.
- Recent press: what are they saying publicly about their direction? Investor calls, trade press, and LinkedIn posts from leadership tell you what they are prioritizing.
- Gaps: what is missing from their assortment that your product fills? This is the one specific thing your pitch should lead with.
The single most persuasive sentence in any pitch: "I noticed you don't carry a [product type] at your [price point] and here is why ours belongs there."
Match Your Approach to the Channel. They Are Not the Same.
How you pitch Boscov's is not how you pitch Anthropologie. The channel determines the strategy.
Specialty retail breaks into three distinct pitch approaches. Treating them the same is the fastest way to get ignored by all three. The channel determines the format, the tone, the discovery venue, and what comes first in the conversation.
The sequencing matters as much as the approach. Start with Tier A, where you can move quickly and learn what resonates. Use those wins to build the case you need for Tier B show applications. Use the Tier B placements to attract the rep groups that open Tier C. Each tier validates the next.
What the Pitch Actually Needs to Contain.
The format varies. These five elements do not.
A pitch to a specialty retailer is not a brand deck. It is not a story about how you started the company. It is a business case for why a specific product deserves space on a specific shelf. Every component needs to answer a question the buyer is already asking.
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01The product selection. Send two to four products, not your full catalog. Choose the ones that fit most precisely into their existing assortment at the right price point. A buyer who has to decide which of your 40 SKUs belongs in their store will not. Do the work for them.
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02The line sheet. One page per product, or one consolidated sheet with a clear grid. Wholesale price, suggested retail price, UPC, dimensions, weight, minimum order quantity, lead time, country of origin. No paragraph copy. No brand history. Everything a buyer needs to place an order without asking you anything. If they have to email you for a missing spec, the pitch is already losing momentum.
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03The imagery. White background product shot and at least one lifestyle image per product. The white background is for the catalog. The lifestyle is for the buyer to see the product in a context that looks like their store, not a studio. If the lifestyle image looks wrong for their aesthetic, they will know immediately. If it looks right, they will forward it to their manager without being asked.
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04The proof. One concrete piece of evidence that the product sells. A named stockist, a sell-through rate from an existing account, a press mention from a publication their customer reads. Not a testimonial. An actual result. Department store buyers especially want to see that someone else already took the risk and won.
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05The specific ask. What are you proposing? A test order of a specific quantity? A sample review? A 15-minute call to discuss placement? Pitches that end without a clear next step get no response, not because they were bad but because the buyer has nothing to act on. Make the ask small, specific, and easy to say yes to.
Remove from your pitch: your origin story, your values statement, your founding year, your social media follower count, any mention of how excited you are to work with them. None of these help a buyer make a decision. All of them take up space that could be occupied by information that does.
- Subject line: product category + price point + one differentiator
- Body: three sentences maximum before the attachment
- Attachments: line sheet PDF, two to three product images
- Link: your Faire wholesale page or a direct order link
- No attachments over 5MB without asking first
- Physical line sheet printed and laminated, one copy per meeting
- Samples on display; let the product do the talking first
- Have a price card visible without being asked
- Know your MOQ, lead time, and FOB terms cold
- QR code on the table linking to your digital catalog
How to Make First Contact. And What to Never Do.
The channel, the timing, and the first sentence are the whole game.
The first contact is not a pitch. It is a filter. The buyer is deciding in the first sentence whether this is worth five more seconds of their attention. Most cold outreach fails at word three.
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PortalFormal submission portals (Curated by Anthropologie, Paper Source wholesale, Belk vendor setup, Boscov's vspec): fill every field completely. Incomplete submissions are filtered automatically. Attach the strongest single product image. Use the description field to answer the question the portal cannot ask: why this product, for this buyer, now.
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EmailDirect email to a buyer works when you have a named contact. Subject line formula: [Category] + [Retail price] + [The one thing that makes it different]. Example: "Ceramic travel mugs, $38 retail, ships in two weeks." Body: one sentence on the fit for their store, one sentence on proof it sells, the ask. Attachment: line sheet and one image. Nothing else.
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LinkedInLinkedIn outreach to buyers works at a lower rate than email but higher than cold calling. Connect with a note that references a specific product and a specific observation about their store. Do not pitch in the connection request. Pitch in the first message after they accept. Keep it to four sentences. Link to your wholesale page, not your DTC site.
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LocalBarnes and Noble local manager outreach is a specific tactic worth naming. Under James Daunt's decentralized model, store managers have real authority to stock sideline gift and stationery product. Walk in, ask for the manager, introduce the product, leave a sample and a one-page line sheet. This works more often than corporate submissions for locally-rooted brands.
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ShowTrade show floor meetings have a different rhythm. The buyer is moving, not reading. Stand in front of your display, not behind a table. Lead with one product, not a range. Get them to touch something. Ask one question: "What are you building in this category right now?" Then listen. The pitch comes after you understand the answer.
- "I think you would love our products"
- "We are a sustainable brand that"
- "I would love to explore a partnership"
- "We have been featured in"
- "Please let me know if you have any questions"
- Any sentence longer than 20 words in the opening
- "You don't carry [X] at [price point]"
- "[Named account] sells through in 60 days"
- "Ships in 10 days, 12-unit MOQ"
- "Here is the line sheet"
- "Can we schedule 15 minutes?"
- "I will follow up [specific date]"
The Follow-Up Is Where Most Deals Are Won or Lost.
Not following up is not respecting the buyer's inbox. It is giving up on a deal that might have been one message away.
Most retail pitches do not fail because the buyer said no. They fail because the brand disappeared after the first message and the buyer never thought about them again. A buyer who does not respond to your first email is not saying no. They are saying "I haven't made time for this yet." Your job is to give them a reason to make time.
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D+5First follow-up, five days after initial pitch. One sentence. "Did the line sheet come through okay?" Not "just checking in." Not "following up on my previous email." A specific, answerable question that gives them an easy response that does not commit them to anything.
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D+14Second follow-up, two weeks later. Add something new. A new colorway launching, a press mention from the past week, a named retailer that just placed a reorder. Give them a reason to re-evaluate that was not there before. Keep it to three sentences.
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D+30Third follow-up, one month out. This is the sample offer. "I would like to send you a sample if you would be open to it." A buyer who accepts a sample is now invested. Their time has gone into evaluating your product. The yes rate after a sample is dramatically higher than the yes rate from a pitch alone.
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D+60Seasonal trigger. If you have reached 60 days without a response, the next outreach should be tied to their buying calendar: "We are heading into [season] orders and want to make sure you have what you need before our lead times extend." This reframes your follow-up as a service, not a chase.
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ParkAfter four contacts with no response, park the account. Add them to a quarterly newsletter. Show up in their inbox four times a year with something worth reading. A buyer who ignores you in March may be ready in September when a category opens up. The brands that stay visible without being annoying get called first when the opening appears.
The buyer who says "not right now" is the most valuable contact in your pipeline. They already evaluated you and found something worth returning to. Stay in front of them.
When You Hear Back. What a Yes Actually Means.
A buyer's interest is not an order. The work between yes and PO is where brands lose accounts they already won.
A positive response from a buyer is not the finish line. It is the start of a different kind of work. From first interest to first PO, brands routinely lose accounts by going quiet, by providing incomplete information on request, or by failing to meet the operational bar the retailer actually requires.
When a buyer responds positively: move fast. Same-day response if at all possible. Send samples immediately if they ask. Fill out their vendor forms completely on the first submission, not back and forth over two weeks. Every day between their interest and your first PO is a day they could find a reason to slow down or switch attention.
- Vendor setup: most retailers have a vendor setup process that must be completed before a PO can be issued. Fill it out completely, immediately. Missing fields add weeks.
- Compliance documentation: country of origin, CPSIA if children's products, Prop 65 if shipping to California, PFAS certification for select retailers. Have these ready before you need them.
- EDI setup: if the retailer requires EDI, get this moving immediately. EDI setup takes two to four weeks on average. Starting it after the PO is issued causes shipment delays that create chargebacks before the relationship has even started.
- Sample approval: some retailers run a formal sample approval process before the full order ships. Understand their timeline and build it into your production calendar.
- First order negotiation: the retailer may ask for a lower opening price, extended terms, or a consignment arrangement for the first order. Know your floor before you are asked. Decide in advance what you will and will not accept.
- Routing guide compliance: every retailer has a routing guide specifying exactly how shipments must be packed, labeled, and shipped. One non-compliance generates a chargeback that can wipe the margin on your first PO. Read it in full before anything ships.
If a buyer asks for terms you cannot accept, say so directly and offer an alternative. "We cannot do consignment on an opening order, but we can offer net 30 with a 5% early pay discount." Most buyers respect a clear position more than a brand that agrees to everything and then cannot deliver. The relationship starts with the terms conversation.
Know your floor on margin and your limit on payment terms before any negotiation begins. A large account on terms that destroy your cash flow is not a win.
The Canadian Pitch Is a Different Pitch.
Same geography, different language requirements, different buyer culture, different entry points.
The Canadian specialty retail market rewards brands that treat it seriously rather than as an extension of their US strategy. The buyers are different, the trade shows are separate, and since June 2025 there is a hard legal requirement that affects every product you send to a Quebec-based retailer or any chain with Quebec locations.
Any brand shipping to Indigo, Simons, HomeSense Canada, or any national chain with Quebec doors needs bilingual EN/FR labeling before the first shipment. A retailer will not remind you. They will simply not reorder.
The entry point for Canada is CanGift Toronto, which runs twice a year and is the primary venue where Indigo, HomeSense, and independent Canadian buyers discover new brands. The dynamics are different from US shows: buyers here are often making decisions for the entire chain, and relationships built in person at CanGift translate into national accounts, not single-door pilots.
Indigo is currently in a strategic pivot back to books under returning founder Heather Reisman. Gift and lifestyle SKUs are being reduced, not expanded. The opportunity at Indigo right now is in book-adjacent categories: journals, stationery, reading accessories. General home and gift is harder than it was 24 months ago.
Simons is growing aggressively, with the Yorkdale Toronto location opening in 2025 in the former Nordstrom space. Design-forward home and lifestyle brands with a French or Scandinavian aesthetic have a genuine opening here. Direct submission is possible at their supplier page, though relationships developed through Canadian rep agencies significantly improve the conversion rate.
- Bilingual labeling required before any shipment to Quebec
- CanGift Toronto is the primary discovery venue
- Rep agencies often required for national chains
- Relationship culture more pronounced than US
- Hudson's Bay is gone; Simons fills some of that space
The Accounts Worth Chasing in 2026. And the Ones That Are Not.
Channel strategy is also about what you decide not to pursue.
The retail landscape changed significantly in 2024 and 2025. Several retailers that looked like strong targets 18 months ago are now either closed, in financial distress, or have structurally reduced their capacity to bring in new brands. Spending six months pursuing an account that cannot pay you, or that is cutting its vendor list by 25%, is six months not spent on accounts that can grow your business.
The Elliott Investment Management portfolio deserves separate mention because it is the most underused structural opportunity in gift and stationery right now. One private equity firm controls Barnes and Noble, Paper Source, and American Greetings/Papyrus. A vendor with a yes at one of these has natural credibility at the others. This is not guaranteed, but it is a real conversation starter that most brands are not having.
Off-price chains, TJX, Ross, and Burlington are not pitch targets for sub-$5M brands building their first specialty retail presence. They are where excess inventory goes after you have built real distribution elsewhere. Treating them as primary targets compresses your margin before you have the volume to absorb it and signals to specialty buyers that your brand is already in discount channels.
Buyers are not waiting for you. You are one of hundreds of pitches they will see this month. The brands that break through are not the ones with the best products. They are the ones who showed up with the right product for that specific buyer, in a format the buyer can act on without asking questions, at a moment when the buyer was ready to make a decision.
Research the store before you contact anyone. Send two to four products, not a catalog. Lead with the gap you fill, not the story of why you started the company. Follow up five days after the first pitch. Send samples at 30 days. Stay visible for 60 days before moving on. Use wins at accessible channels to build the case you need for harder channels.
The retail channel is a long game. The brands doing real wholesale volume in 2027 started building buyer relationships in 2026, before the account opened.
Build the numbers before you build the pitch.
The Wholesale Price Builder and Faire Commission Calculator on twenty3.tech let you verify your margin model before any buyer conversation. Know your floor, your terms, and your real return per account before someone asks.
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