Fortune | FORTUNE 前天 21:14
How an olive oil entrepreneur found success by emulating Ralph Lauren
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Brightland 是一家以高端橄榄油起家的品牌,其产品主要通过礼品销售,取得了显著的商业成功。为了进一步扩大市场,Brightland 推出价格更亲民的“日常”橄榄油,旨在吸引更广泛的消费者。这一策略借鉴了时尚品牌 Ralph Lauren 的经验,希望实现高端产品与日常产品的无缝衔接。尽管新产品包装引发争议,Brightland 仍坚持其创新和多元化的品牌发展道路,计划在未来几年内实现业务的快速增长。

🎁 Brightland 最初通过高端橄榄油礼品业务取得了成功,产品售价约为 40 美元,并在去年假日季实现了每分钟售出一件产品的销售业绩。

🌱 为了拓展市场,Brightland 推出价格更低的“日常”橄榄油,价格是传统产品的一半。这一举措源于该公司于 2024 年秋季完成的 A 轮融资,总额达 1500 万美元。

🤝 Brightland 与一家之前主要服务餐饮供应商的加州橄榄种植者合作,以确保“日常”橄榄油的供应。该公司希望购买高端产品的顾客也能购买价格更实惠的日常产品,从而扩大客户群体。

👗 Brightland 借鉴了 Ralph Lauren 的品牌策略,后者同时拥有高端的 Purple Label 和平价的 Polo 系列。Brightland 希望通过这种方式,实现高端与日常产品的无缝衔接,为消费者提供更多选择。

💧 Brightland 的“日常”橄榄油采用塑料挤压瓶包装,此前该公司曾推出“披萨油”来测试该包装。尽管这一包装引发争议,Brightland 强调挤压瓶包装在厨房中已使用数十年,并认为这是一种方便的包装形式。

Brightland’s glass-bottled olive oils sell for about $40 each—a price point that has built a business in the mid-eight figures, mostly through gifting. “It became really clear we’ve built this incredible gifting company,” Iyer says, citing a stat that claims a Brightland product was gifted every minute during last year’s holiday season.

Starting at the top has given Brightland more room to play as it tries to reach a customer who’s shopping for their own kitchen year-round. Earlier this month, the company introduced an “everyday” oil that costs half as much as its traditional product—which Iyer considers to be part of the “better” category of CPG. It took years—and a not-previously-reported fall 2024 Series A round, for a total of $15 million in funding—to get the idea over the line. Brightland’s California olive farmers were not big enough to produce a more mass product; eventually, Iyer found a farmer who had not previously worked with a brand, and had instead been mostly supporting food service providers.

Aishwarya Iyer, founder of olive oil brand Brightland.

Courtesy of Brightland

The hope is that customers who have been buying Brightland products as gifts now turn to the brand for their own day-to-day use. Some consumers could downgrade their own purchases and start buying the cheaper product, but Iyer is excited about reaching a broader array of customers—online and across Whole Foods, Amazon, Erewhon, Bloomingdale’s, and more retailers. “It opens our universe up,” she says, adding that she could see the business doubling or tripling within a few years as a result.

“I haven’t seen any other food brands have luxury and everyday and bridge that together really seamlessly,” she says. Instead, she looked to fashion to make the transition—specifically Ralph Lauren. “Ralph Lauren not only has Purple Label, but they also have Polo, and they’re able to do that so beautifully,” she says. “That’s who I looked at for inspiration.”

The new everyday product comes in a plastic, squeeze-top bottle. Brightland’s first squeeze top product, a “pizza oil” it used to test-drive the concept in 2023, drew the ire of olive oil competitor Graza, whose cofounder accused Brightland of copying its own packaging. Iyer has never publicly weighed in on the olive oil drama, but does so now: “The squeeze bottle is not novel or new. It has been used for decades in kitchens,” she says. “And if that’s the only thing that somebody has to talk about, I don’t know what to say. There are so many other things that Brightland has to talk about. And for these oils, this is just a convenient packaging format.”

Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com

The Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.

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Brightland 橄榄油 品牌拓展 市场策略
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