Caraway, the direct-to-consumer cookware brand known for ceramic non-stick sets, now sits on shelves in more than 500 Walmart locations nationwide, according to Retail Dive. The move marks a deliberate expansion from online-only into mass retail, executed after the brand spent three years building proof of consumer demand through its own channels.
The company did not jump straight into wholesale. It launched direct in 2019, selling cookware sets online at premium price points—typically $395 for a seven-piece set. That allowed Caraway to collect first-party purchase data, understand repeat rates, and identify which SKUs moved without markdown. Only after establishing that foundation did the brand approach Walmart with a story grounded in numbers, not hope.
The mechanism here is risk transfer. A retailer buying unproven inventory carries all the downside. A retailer buying a brand that has already demonstrated consumer pull at full price sees a safer bet. Caraway's DTC operation provided the proof of concept. Walmart's merchant team could review actual sales velocity, customer acquisition cost, and lifetime value before committing hundreds of stores. The brand also maintained pricing discipline online, avoiding the race to discount that erodes wholesale margin and makes retail partnerships unattractive.
Smaller physical-product brands can steal this play without Caraway's capital. The sequence: sell direct for 12 to 18 months minimum, long enough to generate clean data on which products move and which customers return. Track your AOV, your repeat purchase rate, and your organic search volume. When you approach a regional retailer or a single chain, lead with those numbers in a one-page sell sheet—no fluff, just the three metrics that show pull. Pitch a test in 10 to 25 doors, not chainwide. Offer to supply product on consignment or extended terms for the pilot, removing their inventory risk. Use your DTC pricing as the anchor so the retailer's margin looks strong. If the test works, expand. If it stalls, you still have your owned channel.
The broader lesson is that wholesale is not a rescue. It is a second act that works when the first act proves the market. Brands that go to retail too early, before they understand their own unit economics or customer, often accept bad terms, end up with stranded inventory, and lose control of their pricing. Caraway spent years earning the leverage to walk into Walmart and negotiate from a position of documented demand, not desperation.
For a solo founder or small brand, the play starts with saying no to wholesale until your DTC operation runs clean. Then you use it as proof, not as a pivot.