DTC brands are closing stores faster than they opened them. Allbirds plans to shutter up to 15 underperforming stores in 2024. That represents roughly one-third of their entire fleet. The financial damage? Between $7 million and $9 million in closure costs alone. Outdoor Voices went further.
They closed every single retail location. These aren't isolated failures. They represent a shift in how digital-native brands approach physical retail. The Unit Economics Don't Transfer Most DTC brands built their business
models around specific digital metrics. Customer acquisition costs, lifetime values, and conversion rates that work beautifully online. But physical retail operates on completely different economics. Consider the math that breaks most expansions.
If your digital CAC sits around $25 and your average order value hits $50, you have workable margins online. Add shipping, production, and operations, and you can still turn a profit. Now add rent, utilities, staff wages, and inventory carrying costs for a physical location. The margins evaporate instantly.
Allbirds learned this lesson expensively. Their SG&A expenses jumped to $166.7 million in 2022, representing 56% of net revenue. The previous year, those same expenses were $122.2 million, just 44% of revenue. That's what happens when fixed costs meet underperforming locations.
Digital Teams Can't Run Retail Operations The operational expertise that drives DTC success online creates systematic failures offline. Digital marketing teams excel at funnel optimization, conversion rate testing, and customer acquisition. But physical retail demands completely different skills…