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In 2024, Pokémon Scarlet and Violet led the franchise in dollar sales. In 2025, Pokémon ranked as the #1 toy property in 9 of the 12 countries we track. 🌎

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Shopper and Store Activation

Precision Strategies for Growing Brands: Using Data to Pinpoint Perfect Store Locations for Product Launches

Getting a product on a store shelf is a major milestone for any scaling brand, but determining the exact shelves that set the stage for success is crucial.

By

Katelyn Bertsos

14 Apr 2026

Buyers often offer a limited trial run to prove a product's worth. Suppliers have one chance to show that their item drives category growth and deserves permanent distribution.


Growing brands must ensure their test, which may run in a few dozen stores, occurs in the absolute best environment for their product. Instead of relying on broad demographic assumptions or basic geographic data, they can gain shelf space and retailer and shopper traction by identifying the right retailer for their offerings and, importantly, the exact right doors within that retail operation.


Granular, store-level analytics give scaling brands the precision they need to build a compelling case for specific store placements. This data-driven approach removes guesswork from product launches, aligns items with verified high-value shoppers, and sets the stage for sustainable brand growth.

The Challenges of an Unpredictable Retail Landscape


Introducing and selling a new product as an SMB competing against large and legacy brands is daunting enough. That challenge is amplified today, as consumer shopping habits are more fragmented and people are less loyal to single banners.


For example, a shopper might visit a mass merchandiser to save money on paper goods and general merchandise, then head across town to a premium grocer to purchase high-quality meat and organic produce. If an emerging brand sells premium organic snacks, placing that product in a mass merchandiser might seem like a win on paper due to high foot traffic, but the customers walking down those specific aisles are probably not in the mindset to buy a premium item.


When brands launch blindly, they risk placing products in locations where their true target audience simply isn't shopping for that specific category. This results in slow movement on the shelf, disappointing test results, and a missed opportunity for expansion.

Why the Right Store Matters as Much as the Right Retailer


Location is everything, and that’s as true in retailing as it is in real estate. You might assume that all stores within a specific vicinity share the same shopper profile, but store-level data could reveal a completely different reality. Customer bases might differ notably in a nearby town or even within the same neighborhood.


A host of variables alters a store’s audience. In addition to factors like street location and price, one store may attract more affluent shoppers because of its extensive selection of organic produce and premium prepared foods, while a smaller-footprint store down the road might draw customers looking for an easy-in, easy-out experience.


These seemingly small factors can change the entire demographic makeup of the store's foot traffic. A brand might think it should be in both stores in that neighborhood, but the data shows that one location drives high volume for a product, while the other leaves it gathering dust. Understanding how each household interacts with a specific trade area is what reveals whether a location is a true fit.

Overcoming Limited Data with Proxy Shopper Profiles


A common concern for emerging brands as they strive to widen their shelf presence is a lack of historical sales data. When launching a new product, a supplier might not have current buyers to analyze. Fortunately, scaling brands don’t need years of historical data to make highly targeted store selections.


When a new item is developed, a brand has specific characteristics in mind, such as flavor profile, convenience, sustainability, or other attributes. Brands can look at demographic insights, including information on age, household composition, income level, and ethnicity, to identify which consumers or households are likely to buy something that aligns with those product characteristics. From there, they can understand how these groups behave across channels, assess which segments show higher purchase propensity, and link those insights to store‑level performance to determine where the “right” shoppers are already concentrated.

Tapping Into the Power of Independent Retailers


In discussions about product rollouts, the conversation often defaults to major grocery chains and mass merchants. However, emerging brands can unlock valuable opportunities at independent retailers and convenience stores.


There are hundreds of thousands of independent retail locations across the country. For many small or regional brands, these stores represent a highly lucrative, underserved market. Moreover, it can be easier to secure shelf space in an independent store than in a national chain.


By utilizing targeting tools with geographic and demographic information, a small or mid-market company can identify which independent locations serve their high-value shoppers. Coming to these independent operators with data proving that their shoppers want or would be open to a product accelerates the speed-to-market pace and serves the needs of the customer base.

Actionable Tips for Data-Driven Store Selection


To ensure that product launches reach their full potential, SMBs can consider several actionable strategies for optimizing store selection:


  • Define your high-value shopper: Look beyond basic demographics. Identify the behavioral traits, lifestyle choices, and purchasing propensities that align with your product's core value proposition.


  • Target the door, not the banner: Go deeper than broad retailer agreements. Use data to pinpoint the specific store locations that over-index for your target consumer.


  • Quantify the dollar potential: When pitching buyers, bring store-level reports that estimate the dollar potential for your product at specific locations. This proves you understand their business and builds confidence in your brand.


  • Monitor retail dynamics: Remember that the retail landscape constantly shifts through mergers, acquisitions, and store closings. Ensure your data sources frequently update store definitions so your targeting remains accurate.


  • Look for underserved cohorts: Analyze granular trade areas to find hidden pockets of demand, particularly within independent and regional retail networks.

Measure, Tweak, and Scale Success


While getting a product on the shelf is a victory, much work continues after placement. Once an item is live in meticulously selected test stores, the brand must immediately begin measuring success.


Accessible market, consumer and retailer intelligence solutions, like Circana's Liquid Data Go®, provide fast, actionable insights that help identify ideal store locations and also prove product performance. By reviewing monthly data updates, an SMB can quickly identify sales upticks in specific stores. They can see what is working, course-correct where necessary, and refine their strategy in real time.


Instead of waiting quarters to understand performance, scaling brands weekly reports to gauge the impact of their store selection decisions within 30 days. This agility allows them to come back to the retailer with verified proof of success and a reason to expand beyond trial to broader and sustained distribution across even more precisely targeted locations.

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