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Prose CEO Arnaud Plas on growing a company with profitability in mind

Modern Retail Podcast · with Arnaud Plas · April 25, 2024 · 22 min

Summary

Prose, the customizable beauty brand, shares its journey to achieving meaningful profitability while scaling rapidly to nearly $500 million in revenue since 2018. CEO Arnaud Plas reveals how vertical integration, automated production, and strategic product expansion are key to lowering costs, commanding premium pricing, and maintaining a healthy balance between growth and profitability. This episode offers a blueprint for DTC brands aiming for sustainable, long-term value creation.

Key takeaways

Themes

dtc strategysupply chain & operationsfinance & fundraisingfounder & leadership

Topics covered

dtc profitabilityvertical integrationautomated manufacturingcustomized products pricingstrategic product expansionbalancing growth and profitability

Episode description

Every brand talks about paths to profitability, but few actually reach it. Customizable beauty brand Prose is one company that has bucked the trend and reached meaningful profitability. The company has made nearly $500 million since launching in 2018 and estimates it will bring in $160 million this year. What's more, this year the company is on track to be profitable, after hitting profitability last May as well for the entire third quarter of 2023. At the Modern Retail Commerce Summit, held last week in New Orleans, Prose co-founder and CEO Arnaud Plas spoke about how he's been leading the company to reach these major milestones. "That has been a journey," Plas said. Prose hasn't sacrificed growth in order to hit its profitability targets. For example, the company has expanded into new areas. "A major step with a spirit of reaching profitability [was] we launched skin care in 2023," Plas said. While expanding into new categories is expensive, the thesis behind Prose was to build a vertically integrated and automated production system and then add more products to grow revenue. "The key was really: How do we automate production and customization?" Plas said. By building out its own New York-based manufacturing, and figuring out how to automate parts of it, Prose was able to lower its production cost over the years while also charging a premium for offering customized products. It took many years, but Plas believed that if the brand could streamline its production enough while launching into new areas, the financials would work out. "If we were able to execute this, there would be a pretty high and significant value creation for the company," he said. But brands can't go all in on growth at once. And perhaps that's the biggest lesson from Prose's evolution so far. "The reality is that when you want to be profitable, you have to sequence your efforts," said Plas.

Frequently asked about this episode

What does this episode say about dtc strategy?
Prioritize vertical integration and automated production from the outset to significantly lower long-term production costs and enable premium pricing for customized products.
What does this episode say about supply chain & operations?
Implement a 'sequenced effort' approach to growth, focusing on profitability milestones before aggressive expansion into new categories to ensure financial stability.
What does this episode say about finance & fundraising?
Invest in owned manufacturing capabilities to gain greater control over supply chain, enhance customization options, and build competitive advantage through operational efficiency.
What does this episode say about founder & leadership?
Leverage customization as a core differentiator to justify premium pricing and foster strong customer loyalty, contributing to a healthy CLTV/CAC ratio.
What does this episode say about dtc strategy?
Balance growth with profitability by strategically expanding product lines (e.g., skincare) that align with existing automated production capabilities, rather than pursuing unbridled expansion.

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