Retail War Games

Click to Print: How Toybox Transformed 3D Printing Into a True Consumer Experience | Ben Baltes

25 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Click to Print: How Toybox Transformed 3D Printing Into a True Consumer Experience | Ben Baltes

Descripción

In this episode of Retail War Games, I sit down with Ben Baltes, the co-founder and CEO of Toybox. Ben is a brilliant former Microsoft programmer who took a heavily fragmented, complex industrial tool and completely reimagined it for true consumer adoption. We pull back the curtain on how Toybox built a friction-free "click-to-print" software ecosystem that allows kids aged 6 to 12 to print out high-quality toys with the press of a button. Ben shares the reality of moving from an 8-year, highly predictable DTC framework to landing major retail wins—including an insane 20,000-unit sell-out at Sam's Club in just a couple of months. We also dive into the high-stakes world of entertainment licensing with heavy hitters like DreamWorks, Warner Bros, and NASA, and get the honest, unfiltered story of how a legendary appearance on Shark Tank literally saved the business from shutting down.

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168 episodios

Portada del episodio Performance Lifestyle & Equipment | Retail Collective Summit

Performance Lifestyle & Equipment | Retail Collective Summit

Recorded live at the Retail Collective Summit on May 4–5, 2026, moderators Sean Reyes and Robert Axon host a powerhouse panel featuring Nate Checketts (Rhone), Matt Navarro (Stanley), Brian Garofalow (Skullcandy), and Nate Alder (Klymit). This session bypasses retail buzzwords to expose how iconic consumer goods brands build fierce emotional connection and community loyalty. The executives open up about their biggest operational hurdles, from Matt Navarro fixing Stanley's crumbling infrastructure during a period of explosive, viral growth to Nate Checketts buying back Rhone from private equity to protect a 50-year brand-first vision over short-term fund cycles. Brian Garofalow reveals how Skullcandy completely flipped a negative brand perception by launching a low-cost, high-impact product partnership with Bose, while Nate Alder details how Klymit used rapid CNC beta testing to give users a sense of product ownership. Together, they deliver a blunt masterclass on navigating Shopify scale, data analytics, and embracing the patient, multi-year journey required to build an authentic legacy brand. Moderators: Sean Reyes & Robert Axon Panelists: Brian Garofalow, Nate Checketts, Matt Navarro, Nate Alder

12 de jun de 202651 min
Portada del episodio The 1980s Childhood Instinct: Why Every Business Needs Room to Get Messy and Make Mistakes | Gary Mac Herring

The 1980s Childhood Instinct: Why Every Business Needs Room to Get Messy and Make Mistakes | Gary Mac Herring

In this episode of Retail War Games, I sat down with Gary Mac Herring, owner of Mary Mack's Inc., for a conversation rooted in pure entrepreneurial grit. Starting with a 19-year-old's payphone-operated snow cone stand, Gary explains how the lawless freedom of a 1980s childhood shaped his business philosophy: giving teams the room to make mistakes, get messy, and hustle is the only way to build resilience. Gary pulls back the curtain on cutting out middlemen, sharing the wild story of flying blind to the 2008 Canton Fair to secure direct, handshake-driven relationships with suppliers that established their 20-year manufacturing moat. We also break down a massive retail achievement: how Mary Mack's vertically integrated team successfully launched two entirely separate CPG brands into Target nationwide and a third of Walmart within a single two-week window. From the stark logistical realities of managing national 3PL fulfillment to the humbling "crickets" that often follow a seemingly perfect major industry trade show, Gary drops a phenomenal, low-key masterclass on what it truly takes to sell fun in a box and build an indestructible commercial brand.

10 de jun de 202629 min
Portada del episodio The Sound of Scale: Globalizing a Lifestyle Brand | Brian Garofalow

The Sound of Scale: Globalizing a Lifestyle Brand | Brian Garofalow

In this episode of Retail War Games, recorded live at the Retail Collective Summit on May 4–5, 2026, Skullcandy CEO Brian Garofalow breaks down the high-stakes reality of global retail expansion. Moving past lifestyle hype, Brian introduces his "home remodel rule," giving founders a blunt reality check on why international scaling routinely takes twice as long and costs three times as much as projected. He walks us through how Skullcandy uses real-time point-of-sale data to evaluate market size to the penny, while warning executives about the massive internal opportunity costs of dividing focus away from their core domestic market. We explore the hidden tactical barriers of global trade, from strict international battery compliance to navigating protectionist protocols like India's manufacturing mandates and MercadoLibre's platform dominance in Latin America. Brian also outlines the unique culture-building investments that keep Skullcandy authentic—such as paying for employee lift passes and reimbursing live concert tickets—ensuring his team genuinely lives the brand. Finally, he shares his personal transition from CMO to CEO, delivering a powerful lesson on learning to conduct the entire orchestra rather than trying to be the best violin player in the room.

8 de jun de 202625 min
Portada del episodio We are in the Logistics Business: How Filterbuy Scaled to $300 Million in DTC Revenue | David Heacock

We are in the Logistics Business: How Filterbuy Scaled to $300 Million in DTC Revenue | David Heacock

In this episode of Retail War Games, I am joined by David Heacock, the founder and CEO of Filterbuy, for an absolute masterclass on what it takes to disrupt a commodity category. David walked away from a career as an options trader at Goldman Sachs to buy a struggling industrial supply house in Alabama, eventually pivoting it into one of the largest direct-to-consumer air filter manufacturers in the United States, on track to clear over $300 million in revenue. David pulls back the curtain on why he views Filterbuy strictly as a logistics business rather than an air filter brand. Because air filters are incredibly expensive and bulky to ship, David solved the scaling equation by building a massive manufacturing and fulfillment network. Spanning nine facilities across the US and Canada, his infrastructure allows Filterbuy to produce 150,000 filters daily and achieve next-day delivery to 80% of the country. We also break down the broken realities of the retail shelf space landscape, why the omnichannel strategy of matching online and in-store pricing is pricing major retailers completely out of the market, and how Filterbuy uses granular zip-code purchase data to prove exactly why traditional big-box stores are stocking the wrong sizes. From expanding into commercial B2B spaces like hospitals and hotels to their massive new push into mini-splits and air purification verticals, David's framework is a masterclass in scale, operational moat-building, and engineering an unbeatable consumer advantage.

5 de jun de 202632 min
Portada del episodio The Highway to Success is Always Under Construction: The ZAGG Scaling Story | Robert Pedersen

The Highway to Success is Always Under Construction: The ZAGG Scaling Story | Robert Pedersen

In this special episode of Retail War Games, we share the incredible keynote presentation by Robert Pedersen, co-founder and former CEO of ZAGG, recorded live at the Retail Collective Summit on May 4–5, 2026, in Ogden, Utah. Robert delivers an unfiltered masterclass on operational resilience and bold experimentation, revealing how he scaled a hardware brand from a simple mall kiosk into a $265 million public powerhouse listed on the NASDAQ. The core of his message lies in a profound piece of advice passed down by his father: the highway to success is always under construction. Instead of viewing structural challenges or market delays as dead ends, Robert breaks down why entrepreneurs must embrace a "why not?" mindset that prioritizes immediate action and flips every obstacle into a detour toward profit. Throughout the presentation, Robert exposes rare, behind-the-scenes stories of strategic dealmaking and guerrilla marketing. He walks us through how a simple dinner in New York turned into the landmark $105 million acquisition of their up-and-coming rival, iFrogz, effectively protecting their retail market at Walmart and proving completely accretive to their public stock price. He also recounts the wild, legendary marketing plays where he willed massive strategic partnerships into existence, including bringing MC Hammer directly into Apple's corporate headquarters and converting a threatening legal cease-and-desist from Kim Kardashian's attorneys into a highly lucrative global product partnership that landed in Apple stores worldwide. This keynote is an indispensable guide for founders and executives trying to navigate the complex, unpredictable construction zones of modern retail with absolute integrity.

3 de jun de 202636 min