According to Yahoo Finance, Australian UPF 50+ sun-protection brand Solbari appointed Grayson Davis as Head of Sales and launched U.S. wholesale expansion after building its business direct-to-consumer. The brand targets certified daily sun-safe apparel placements across specialty retail, marking a distribution shift for a category that spent most of its life online and in catalogs.
Solbari manufactures clothing with UPF 50+ fabric certification, blocking 98% of UV radiation. The brand spent years educating consumers through its own channel before pursuing wholesale. The hire signals that Solbari believes the market now understands the product well enough to buy it off a retail floor without heavy brand education at point of sale.
The move works because the brand solved the two problems that keep certified functional apparel out of department stores: margin structure and sell-through predictability. Functional categories with testing costs and fabric premiums typically carry retail math that breaks traditional wholesale keystone pricing. Solbari likely negotiated terms that preserve its margin while offering retailers a defensible story—certifiable UV protection rather than a style claim a competitor copies in 90 days. Specialty retail wants products that cannot be duplicated by a buyer's private label, and third-party UPF certification creates that moat. The hire of a dedicated sales head rather than a multi-line rep firm means Solbari expects enough volume to justify a direct salary and believes it can train retail staff on the technical story.
A small physical-product brand running the same play starts with a feature that has third-party proof: a certification, a patent, a test result a buyer can verify. That proof must tie to a customer problem the retailer already hears—sun damage, allergen exposure, durability failure—so the sell-through story writes itself. The brand approaches specialty retailers, not department stores, and pitches a 4-6 SKU starter assortment with 45-day payment terms and a 10-unit minimum per door. The founder writes a one-page line sheet with the certification logo at the top, the test result in the first bullet, and three customer quotes that name the problem the product solves. The brand offers to staff a trunk show for the first 30 days in-store, turning the placement into a live demo that trains the retailer's team while moving product. Cost: travel to 3-5 regional doors, samples for one SKU rotation, and the founder's time. The retailer learns to sell the product, the brand learns which SKUs move, and both sides build confidence before committing to a full seasonal buy.
Solbari's timing reflects a broader pattern: certified functional categories go wholesale when the consumer education burden shifts from the brand to the culture. When enough search volume, press, and word-of-mouth exist that a shopper walks into a store asking for the category by name, the retailer stops seeing the product as a science project and starts seeing it as margin.