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Read the postProfit Intelligence
DTC (also called D2C, direct-to-consumer, or direct commerce) is a go-to-market model where a brand manufactures or sources products and sells them directly to end customers — bypassing traditional wholesale, distribution, and retail channels. The brand owns the storefront, the transaction, and the customer data.
The DTC model matters for operators because it changes the entire cost and margin structure of a business. A brand selling through wholesale might receive 40-50% of the retail price. The same brand selling DTC keeps 100% of the retail price, minus COGS, fulfillment, and acquisition costs. That margin difference is significant — but it comes with full responsibility for marketing, logistics, and customer service.
For DTC e-commerce brands, healthy gross margins range from 50-70% before marketing spend. After CAC and fulfillment, contribution margin typically falls to 15-30%. The businesses that thrive in DTC are those that track unit economics at the order level — not just at the P&L level.
DTC is not the same as e-commerce. E-commerce is a sales channel. DTC is a business model. A brand can sell DTC through its own e-commerce site, its own retail stores, or even its own app. A brand selling on Amazon is e-commerce but not DTC — Amazon owns the customer relationship.
DTC operators face a specific challenge: they own every cost in the value chain. Wholesale brands share customer acquisition with their retailers. DTC brands bear it alone. This makes tracking CAC, ROAS, AOV, and contribution margin per order not optional — it is the difference between a profitable business and a cash incinerator.
A DTC brand spending $150,000 per month on Meta and Google Ads needs to know, per campaign, whether the revenue covers acquisition cost, product cost, fulfillment, and returns. If blended CAC is $45 and first-order contribution margin is $38, the company loses $7 on every new customer. The bet is that repeat purchases make up the gap. Without tracking repurchase rate and cohort LTV, that bet is blind.
The margin of error in DTC is thin. Rising ad costs, increasing return rates, and supply chain cost inflation can turn a profitable DTC brand unprofitable in a single quarter. Operators who track these metrics weekly catch the shift before it compounds.
DTC profitability is a system of connected metrics. Missing one creates blind spots.
DTC Profitability Stack:
Revenue metrics: AOV → Revenue → Net Revenue (after returns)
Cost metrics: COGS + Fulfillment + CAC = Total Variable Cost
Margin metrics: Contribution Margin = Net Revenue - Total Variable Cost
Efficiency: ROAS, Blended ROAS, MER
Retention: Repurchase Rate, Cohort LTV, LTV:CAC Ratio
The critical calculation for DTC:
First-Order Contribution Margin = AOV - COGS - Fulfillment - CAC
Example:
- AOV: $95
- COGS: $28
- Fulfillment (pick, pack, ship): $12
- CAC: $42
First-order CM = $95 - $28 - $12 - $42 = $13
The brand makes $13 on the first order. If LTV:CAC is 3:1,
the customer becomes significantly more profitable over time.
How key DTC metrics vary across product categories. Ranges based on cross-brand performance data.
| Category | Median AOV | Gross margin | CAC range | First-order profitable? | Typical repurchase rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consumables / supplements | $45-$65 | 65-75% | $25-$50 | Often yes | 35-50% (subscription driven) |
| Apparel / accessories | $95-$150 | 55-70% | $40-$80 | Sometimes | 20-35% |
| Beauty / skincare | $55-$85 | 70-80% | $30-$60 | Often yes | 30-45% |
| Home / furniture | $200-$400 | 45-60% | $60-$150 | Usually yes (high AOV) | 8-15% (low frequency) |
| Food / beverage | $35-$55 | 50-65% | $20-$45 | Rarely on first order | 40-55% (subscription driven) |
Sources: Shopify Commerce Trends 2025, Triple Whale D2C Benchmarks 2025, Littledata E-commerce Benchmarks 2025.
1. Scaling ad spend without tracking first-order profitability
Many DTC brands measure top-line revenue and ROAS but never calculate whether the first order covers its costs. If first-order contribution margin is negative, the business is borrowing from future purchases that may never happen. Calculate first-order CM before scaling any channel.
2. Ignoring return rate in unit economics
A 22% return rate on a $100 AOV means effective net AOV is $78. If the unit economics were built on $100, every assumption breaks. Return rates vary by channel — social media traffic often returns at 2-3x the rate of email traffic. Track returns by acquisition source.
3. Treating all customers as equal in LTV models
A customer acquired through a 40%-off sale has fundamentally different LTV than one who paid full price. Discount-acquired customers repurchase at lower rates and at lower AOV. Segment LTV by acquisition source and discount level.
4. Measuring blended metrics instead of channel-level economics
A blended CAC of $55 might combine a Google organic customer ($0 CAC) with a paid social customer ($110 CAC). The blended number describes neither. For DTC, channel-level economics determine where to invest next — blended numbers hide the decision.
Fairview's Margin Intelligence connects to Shopify, Stripe, Google Ads, and Meta Ads to calculate DTC unit economics automatically. Contribution margin is tracked per order, per channel, and per campaign — with COGS, fulfillment, and returns factored in.
The Operating Dashboard displays first-order profitability alongside ROAS, blended ROAS, and AOV trended over time. When a channel's contribution margin turns negative, the Next-Best Action Engine flags it: "Meta prospecting contribution margin is -$8 per order after 26% return rate. Review audience quality and creative alignment."
→ See how Margin Intelligence works
| DTC (Direct-to-Consumer) | Wholesale | |
|---|---|---|
| Customer relationship | Brand owns it | Retailer owns it |
| Margin per unit | Higher (no middleman) | Lower (retailer takes 40-60%) |
| Customer data | Full access — email, behavior, purchase history | Limited or none |
| Customer acquisition | Brand's responsibility | Shared with retailer |
| Fulfillment | Brand's responsibility | Retailer handles |
| Brand control | Complete — pricing, packaging, experience | Partial — retailer sets shelf placement and pricing |
DTC trades higher margin per unit for higher operational complexity. Wholesale trades margin for distribution reach. Most brands at scale run both — using DTC for margin and data, wholesale for volume and discovery.
DTC means a brand sells directly to customers through its own website or stores, without using retailers or distributors as middlemen. Instead of selling to Walmart who sells to the customer, the brand sells to the customer itself. This gives the brand more margin, more data, and more control over the experience.
No. E-commerce is a sales channel (selling online). DTC is a business model (selling directly to customers). A DTC brand can sell through its own e-commerce site, its own app, or its own physical stores. A brand selling on Amazon is doing e-commerce but not DTC — Amazon controls the customer relationship.
Five metrics determine DTC profitability: AOV (average order value), CAC (customer acquisition cost), COGS (cost of goods), contribution margin per order, and LTV (lifetime value). The critical question is whether first-order contribution margin is positive — and if not, whether LTV justifies the acquisition investment.
Gross margin for DTC brands typically ranges from 50-75% depending on category. Beauty and supplements run 65-80%. Apparel is 55-70%. Food and beverage is 50-65%. After marketing costs (CAC), the operating margin (contribution margin) drops to 15-30% for healthy DTC brands.
Weekly for active campaign metrics (ROAS, CAC, AOV). Monthly for contribution margin per order and first-order profitability. Quarterly for LTV and cohort analysis. The weekly review catches campaign-level problems. The monthly review catches margin erosion. The quarterly review validates the business model.
Because acquisition costs eat the margin. A DTC brand with $10M in revenue, 60% gross margin, and $5M in marketing spend has $1M in gross profit after marketing — before salaries, rent, and fulfillment overhead. The revenue looks impressive, but the unit economics (high CAC, low repeat rate) destroy profitability.
Fairview is an operating intelligence platform that tracks DTC unit economics automatically — including AOV, contribution margin, ROAS, and LTV by channel. Start your free trial →
Siddharth Gangal is the founder of Fairview. He built DTC profitability tracking into the platform after watching brands celebrate revenue milestones while losing money on every order they shipped.
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