Entrepreneur

Brandless Has a New Owner, and a New Mission. Can It Save Itself?

It was a once-hot company with a bad business model, like many of its direct-to-consumer peers. Now it's back as a quieter company focused on slower growth. Is this what DTC needs?
Source: Viktor Koen
Viktor Koen

Not many people know the name Ryan Treft. That’s just fine with Ryan Treft.

“I don’t plan on hitting the speaking circuit,” he says. “I’d rather be behind the scenes.” It’s served him well so far. Treft has been behind some great direct-to-consumer success stories — stories you also may never have heard of because they didn’t get much press and weren’t awash in investor money. But they made money. Lots of it. Which was the point.

Now Treft has bought a brand many people have heard of: It’s , the onetime DTC company that raised nearly $300 million (much from the notoriously growth-hungry ) on the promise of selling cheap, everyday goods to . It

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur9 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
15 Side Hustles You Never Knew Existed
If you don’t get squirmy around creepy-crawlies, try breeding insects! Crickets, Dubia roaches, and mealworms are all easy to cultivate, and lizard-owners never stop needing to feed their reptiles. Jeff Neal learned this in 2016, when he bought his d
Entrepreneur2 min read
Weathernews Inc.
“Asia will be the furnace in which a new era is forged,” according to global consultancy McKinsey – and Japan, as the continent’s second-biggest economy, will play a central role in this. The key engine of growth is likely to be services, which accou
Entrepreneur2 min read
The Loss That Changed My Company
When I was 17, I founded a company to save police officers’ lives. We distribute and manufacture body armor and other protective equipment. And yet, I will admit: For the first eight years, this work felt abstract—like watching war unfold on the nigh

Related Books & Audiobooks