Part I
The Bain List, Brand by Brand
Reading note on this list
Bain's "Insurgent Brands" is roughly defined as fast-growing US consumer brands over-indexing in growth versus the giant CPGs in their categories. Inclusion isn't a quality score — it's a velocity score. Some of these brands have strong long-term futures; some are riding a single narrative arc that will fade. I've tried to call out which is which.
For "primary lever," I've used four buckets:
- Distribution — they got into the right places (retail door count, marketplace shelf, hospitality) at the right moment.
- Quality — the product is meaningfully better than the legacy alternative on a single dimension a customer cares about.
- True Innovation — a real product or formulation breakthrough that didn't exist before.
- Story / Personality — the brand is carried by a founder, celebrity, or narrative more than the product per se.
Most winners have two of the four. I've named the dominant one. Where I'm uncertain about a logo, I've flagged it.
New Insurgents (2026 cohort)
Food & Beverage
Health, Beauty, Home
Logos I cannot confidently identify in NEW INSURGENTS:
- The mark between "Garage Beer" and "GooseCreek" reading like "BB" — possibly Bobbie organic infant formula. Worth a manual check.
- "Organic Ranchers"-style word-mark in row 3 — could be Maple Hill, Organic Valley Pasture-Raised, or a cattle co-op brand.
Existing Insurgents (returning brands)
These are brands Bain already had on the list and are still growing fast enough to retain their slot. Many are at $50M-$1B+ in revenue.
Food & Beverage
Health, Beauty, Personal Care, Home
Logos I cannot confidently identify in EXISTING INSURGENTS:
- The mark in row 5 between Carbone and Kendamil reading "True Lect" / "True Lact" / "Live Lact." Could be a dairy or probiotic brand.
- The "Mar..." mark above MONDAY — partially obscured by the LinkedIn UI. Likely ManScaped given context.
- "Rascal's" — multiple brands by this name; without more context I can't confirm which.
Cross-brand strategic insights
Eight patterns jump out across the list. Some are well-known. A few are sharper than the conventional wisdom about insurgent brands.
1. Distribution is still the dominant lever, but it has bifurcated.
The biggest winners on this list got into the right physical shelf — Costco, Whole Foods, Target, Walmart — at the moment a category was opening up. Goose Creek, Bubble, Mando, Millie Moon, Magic Spoon, Chomps, OLIPOP, Liquid Death, Siete, Poppi all share this. The era of "DTC-only brands win" ended around 2021-2022. Every brand on this list at scale has cracked retail.
But there's a second distribution lane: the Amazon + influencer flywheel. Bloom, Physician's Choice, Force Factor, Guru Nanda, RYSE, and several supplement brands won mostly through Amazon SEO + creator content + value pricing. This is a different game from Whole Foods, but it's just as much a distribution play.
2. "Clean-label" alone is no longer the wedge.
Almost every brand on this list has clean ingredients, but only a handful win on clean ingredients alone. The winners pair clean with another differentiator: format (Liquid Death, Graza, Inaba, Mush, Solely), category creation (OLIPOP, Athletic Brewing, Magic Spoon, Mando), or radical transparency (LMNT, MALK).
For Grow, this means "USDA Certified 100% Plant-Based" is necessary but not sufficient. The wedge has to be paired with a format / aesthetic / story that carries on its own. The diffuser is the correct instinct — it's the format wedge that can carry a clean-label story into a category that doesn't currently have either.
3. Personality-led brands are over-represented but their half-life is short.
Lunchly, Garage Beer, Happy Dad, Bloom, lemme, Goodles, Black Rifle, Dan-O's, Once Upon a Farm — these are brands whose primary moat is a person. When the person's relevance fades or they move on, the brand's growth tends to plateau or reverse. Only a few personality-led brands transition into product-led brands successfully.
For Grow, this is relevant because Dan's story is genuinely compelling and underused. But you should be careful not to only be that story — the product needs to be able to walk on its own legs the day a new owner takes over.
4. The "format is the product" pattern is the most defensible new-brand wedge.
Liquid Death (cans), Graza (squeeze bottle), OLIPOP (functional soda), Inaba (lickable purée), Solely (single-ingredient gummy), Mush (refrigerated oats), Force of Nature (electrolysis device), Vejo (pod blender), Goose Creek (mass-priced candle), Mando (whole-body deodorant) — all of these brands' moats live in the format, not the brand or the ingredients. Format moats are harder to copy than recipes.
For Grow, the diffuser is exactly this kind of moat — a nebulizer that puts plant-based fragrance into the air at synthetic-equivalent performance is a format wedge no other natural fragrance brand has. This is the highest-conviction part of the relaunch plan.
5. The exit market is paying $1B+ for clean-label, founder-led brands with $50M-$200M revenue.
In the last 24 months: Poppi → PepsiCo for $1.95B, Siete → PepsiCo for $1.2B, Dr. Squatch → Unilever for ~$1.5B. Earlier comps: Native → P&G ~$100M. Mando is built by the Native team and is widely expected to be the next P&G acquisition.
The pattern: revenue $50M-$300M, contribution margin healthy, brand has a clear retail beachhead AND a story a Big CPG can lift onto a global stage. None of these acquirers care about a $5M brand. They start paying real money around $50M revenue.
6. The "Big CPG can't make this in their labs" test predicts the exits.
Every big exit on this list — Poppi, Siete, Dr. Squatch, Mando (likely next), Liquid Death (eventual) — is something the acquirer's R&D would not have invented. The acquirer paid for the brand and category position, not the formulation.
For Grow, the answer is yes on both axes: the formulation moat (plant-based fragrance at synthetic performance levels), and customer trust (chemical-sensitive customers will not be tricked by a Big CPG product).
7. Wholesale matters, but in a specific way.
The brands here that scaled into Whole Foods, Target, Costco, Walmart did it by treating wholesale as a trust-transfer mechanism, not a margin trade. The retailer's reputation lent credibility to the brand. The brand's social presence drove velocity that protected the slot.
8. "Boring categories made interesting" is the new fertile ground.
Olive oil (Graza), water (Liquid Death), cottage cheese (Good Culture), pancake mix (Kodiak), seasoning (Dan-O's), tampons (CORA), pimple patches (Starface), lip balm (eos), wipes (Dude / Goodwipes), formula (Bobbie / Kendamil / By Heart), bone broth (Kettle & Fire), seaweed snacks (Gimme).
Notice what's missing: there's not a single ground-breaking technology brand on this list. The Insurgent Brands list is dominated by commodity categories that someone made interesting again — through packaging, format, founder voice, or category-creation framing.
Home fragrance is a boring category. Most consumers experience it as Yankee Candle, Bath & Body Works, Glade plug-ins, and Febreze. There has been almost no innovation at retail since the '90s. This is the most fertile ground on the list, and Grow is one of the very few brands trying to disrupt it from a clean-label-plus-format angle.
What Grow can learn — concretely
These map to the existing strategy docs (Relaunch Plan moves, Exposure Playbook pillars). I've called out where each lesson reinforces, contradicts, or extends what's already on the page.
A. The diffuser launch should be positioned as a category-creation play, not a SKU launch.
The pattern across Liquid Death, OLIPOP, Athletic Brewing, Mando is that they didn't launch a product — they renamed the category. Liquid Death is "death to plastic" not "another mineral water." OLIPOP is "modern soda," not "another kombucha." Mando is "whole-body deodorant," not "another Native variant."
Grow has a similar move available: the diffuser isn't "a nebulizer for plant-based oils." It's the first home fragrance system that performs like a synthetic, made entirely from plants. Or, framed as a category: "Real Fragrance" as opposed to Synthetic Fragrance — where Grow defines the category at launch.
B. Premiumization must come with a packaging upgrade, not just a price tag.
The lesson from Graza, MALK, MONDAY, Kit·sch, Bubble: at clean-label premium price points, packaging that signals premium is non-negotiable. Plastic spray bottles at $22 will face customer resentment that doesn't exist at $16.
C. "Story" is necessary, but Grow needs the Dan-as-founder story to scale 5x harder than it currently does.
The brands with personality engines (Dr. Squatch, Liquid Death, Built Bar, Magic Spoon) all spend disproportionately on founder voice + brand-personality content. Grow's founder story is genuinely compelling and underused relative to the Bain list comparables.
Most comparable brands had 50-200 founder-led short-form videos in their first growth year. Pillar 1 of the Exposure Playbook should be 2-3x more aggressive than currently scoped.
D. Retention is a feature of these brands, not the engine.
None of the exit-comparable brands (Poppi, Siete, Dr. Squatch, Mando) won on retention. They won on rapid first-trial-to-mass-awareness conversion. Their retention is good but not exceptional.
Useful reframe: Move 4 saves the business, Moves 1 and 3 create the exit value. Both matter. Don't conflate.
E. The wholesale path has more 2026 leverage than the Relaunch Plan currently assumes.
Mando, Goose Creek, Millie Moon, Bubble, Odele — all of these brands' inflection point was a single anchor retailer. The retail anchor was disproportionately responsible for the brand's growth velocity.
The Relaunch Plan correctly puts wholesale in "the longer game" with no 2026 revenue commitment. The Insurgent Brands list suggests this is too conservative. A single right anchor retailer in 2026 could be more revenue-significant than Move 4. Whitney's pipeline should be evaluated for one breakout door, not 150 average doors.
F. The Klaviyo playbook is right, but the email content has to rise to the level of these brands' brand voice.
Liquid Death's emails are funny enough to forward. Dr. Squatch's emails read like Dr. Squatch's YouTube ads. Magic Spoon's emails feel like Magic Spoon's brand. The retention engine in the Bain list is brand-voice-as-retention, not "more A/B tested emails."
If a customer can't tell a Grow email from a Yankee Candle email, the retention work isn't done.
G. The "boring category made interesting" frame is the most underused asset Grow has.
The competitive set is not Le Labo or Aesop. The competitive set is the chemical-laden mass aisle, and that aisle has been waiting for a clean-label disruptor for 20 years.
This may be the single most important strategic call to make explicitly: Grow is the OLIPOP / Liquid Death / Mando of home fragrance. Not the Le Labo. The OLIPOP altitude is the right altitude.
(Note: Part II below sharpens this further, given the Strategic Playbook's "painkiller, not vitamin" positioning. The CORA / Native / Vanicream cluster may be a closer cultural match than OLIPOP / Liquid Death.)
Long-term strategy scaffold (Part I version — superseded by Part III)
The original Part I sketch named three paths — Strategic Acquisition, Independent Premium House, Multi-Format Lifestyle. This framing is superseded by Part III's dual-path exit framework after Dan's direction (May 2): two parallel eight-figure exits (strategic fold-in + family office) as co-equal targets, PE as last resort, no-exit option always preserved. Skip to Part III →
What's missing — open questions for the Playbook
Things this analysis cannot answer without more input from Dan:
- Path commitment — Lifestyle vs. Accelerated Exit vs. Professional Management. Pick one or commit to a decision date.
- Diffuser pricing and positioning — "natural answer to Le Labo" (premium indie) or "natural answer to Glade / Febreze" (mass clean)? Different brands.
- Wholesale anchor — One hero retailer in 2026, or 150 average doors? Math differs by 5-10x.
- Founder cadence — willing to commit to 100+ pieces of founder-led content in 2026?
- Capital posture — self-funded → break-even → reinvest? Or raise growth equity at the 2027 inflection?
- Real Strategic Playbook 2026 doc — Suggest consolidating into a canonical
Grow_Strategic_Playbook_2026_v2.md.
Superseded
Parts II and III have moved to the Strategic Plan
The original document's Part II (reconciliation with the Strategic Playbook) and Part III (dual-path exit framework) have been absorbed into the canonical Strategic Plan, where they are now expressed as the three-path framework (Hold / 8-figure / 9-figure breakout) and the foundation traits that underpin all three.
Specifically:
- The dual-path exit framework (strategic fold-in + family office) is now Path 2 of the Strategic Plan, with the family-office and strategic acquirer sets preserved.
- The Path 3 nine-figure breakout was added based on Dan's prior CandleScience exit and the Bain insurgent comp set.
- The "Hold and Own" (Rolex/Augusta/Lego) path was added as Path 1.
- The traits-to-build matrix is now in the Strategic Plan's Section 4 ("How the paths converge until 2027") and Section 5 ("Foundation traits").
- The brand voice / "boring vs. bold" treatment is in the Strategic Plan's Section 7.
Read this document for: brand-by-brand reference, cross-brand patterns, "What Grow can learn" lessons.
Read the Strategic Plan for: where Grow is going, what each path requires, and what we're building now to keep all three paths open.
Part III
Dual-Path Exit Framework (revised)
Revising the long-term framing per Dan's direction: PE is a last resort, not a primary path. Two parallel eight-figure exits should coexist as planning targets — a strategic fold-in and a family-office permanent-capital home — and Grow should be built such that either is achievable at the company's option, with a third "no exit" option always preserved.
The exit option set, ordered by Dan's stated preference
The full menu of plausible exits for an $8M-$30M revenue clean-fragrance brand at the 2028-2030 horizon:
| Path | Structure | Typical Size | What they want | What they expect from Dan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Strategic fold-in (preferred) | Category-adjacent CPG buys Grow as a clean-label tuck-in | $20M-$80M | Distinctive brand position; clean-label IP; engaged customer base | 12-24 month earn-in; founder visible through close |
| 2. Family office / permanent-capital (preferred) | Single-/multi-family office or HoldCo for long-term hold | $20M-$80M | Profitable, cash-generating brand; durable moat; founder/operator who can stay | 3-5+ year stay-on as CEO or Exec Chair |
| 3. Independent / "no exit" | Self-funded private business, profit distributions to Dan | n/a — distributions, not sale | n/a | Stays running as long as he wants |
| 4. Search-fund / operator-acquirer | Single ETA buyer or holdco operator buys to run | $10M-$40M | Profitable, founder-replaceable business; runway for the operator | Quick handoff (3-6 months); minimal earn-out |
| 5. ESOP | Employee Stock Ownership Plan buys the company over time | $20M-$80M | Healthy, profitable business with strong middle management | Multi-year staged exit; tax-advantaged for Dan |
| 6. Big-CPG strategic (Path C from Playbook) | P&G / Reckitt / SC Johnson / Unilever Prestige | $150M+ | Scale, retail anchor, multi-state shelf-level category leadership | 2-3 year integration; rigid earn-out; brand absorbed |
| 7. PE / growth equity (last resort) | L Catterton, VMG, Eurazeo, Encore Consumer, Castanea | $30M-$150M (recap) or $50M+ (control) | Growth profile that supports a 5-year flip to a strategic | Aggressive growth targets; potential governance change; second-exit pressure |
| 8. IPO | Public listing | $200M+ implied valuation | Truly category-creating brand at scale | Quarterly earnings reality, full-time CEO role |
The Playbook's $75M target sits cleanly within Paths 1, 2, 5, and 7. That's the eight-figure / low-nine-figure band. Paths 6 and 8 require revenue and growth far beyond the Playbook's stated 2030 target ($20M revenue) and shouldn't drive 2026-2028 decisions.
Path 1 — Strategic fold-in (the "Edgewell / Native model")
A category-adjacent CPG with established retail distribution and supply chain buys Grow because they can't build it. Grow plugs a clean-label gap in their portfolio. They lift Grow's brand into their existing distribution and manufacturing scale. The exit is a multiple of EBITDA or revenue.
Realistic acquirer set at the $75M-$200M tier
| Acquirer | Why they'd care | Recent comparable |
|---|---|---|
| Edgewell Personal Care | Owns Schick, Banana Boat, Hawaiian Tropic, Wet Ones. Bought CORA tampons (~$80M est.). Consistent acquirer of clean-label tuck-ins. Likely #1 strategic suitor for Grow. | CORA acquisition; Cremo Co. tuck-ins |
| Helen of Troy | Owns Hydro Flask, Drybar, Vicks. Acquires consumer brands at $30-300M range. Air-care could fit their wellness growth slice. | Drybar Products ($255M) |
| Newell Brands | Owns Yankee Candle (largest US candle brand) but lacks any clean-label position — Grow plugs that gap directly. | Yankee Candle 2016 ($1.95B); various smaller |
| Henkel Consumer Brands | Owns Schwarzkopf, Persil, Dial, Right Guard. Active in clean-label tuck-ins in Europe. | Smaller European clean-label deals |
| Spectrum Brands | Owns Spectracide, Hot Shot, multiple personal-care + home brands. Has rolled up smaller consumer assets. | Various small acquisitions |
| Church & Dwight | Arm & Hammer, OxiClean, Therabreath. Acquisitive in clean-label / wellness. | Therabreath 2021 ($580M) |
| Native (P&G subsidiary) | If P&G expands the Native umbrella into home fragrance, Grow is the obvious partner. | Native original (~$100M, 2017) |
| SC Johnson Lifestyle Brands | Owns Method, Mrs. Meyer's Clean Day, Caldrea, Babyganics. Family-owned. Cleanest portfolio fit. | Method/Mrs. Meyer's-style |
Strategic pricing dynamics: Strategic fold-ins typically pay 2-4x revenue or 10-15x EBITDA. At the Playbook's $20M revenue / $5M EBITDA, that's a $40M-$80M strategic deal — comfortably eight figures. If Grow grows past $30M revenue with healthy EBITDA, the upper end reaches $100M-$150M.
Why Edgewell is the headline #1: They acquired CORA in late 2024 — exactly the painkiller-positioning brand Part II identified as the closest analog. CORA had ~$50M revenue at acquisition and reportedly sold for ~$80M. Edgewell has explicitly named clean-label personal care as a portfolio priority. The fit on positioning, size, and timing is the cleanest match in the strategic universe.
Path 2 — Family office / permanent-capital holding co (the "Rolex / Augusta / Lego model")
A family office (single-family or multi-family), a HoldCo built on family money, or a permanent-capital vehicle buys Grow as a long-term hold — not a 5-year flip. The buyer cares about cash generation and brand durability, not growth-at-all-costs. Dan stays on as CEO or transitions to Exec Chair on his own timeline. The deal often includes seller financing, equity rollovers, or earn-outs that align long-term.
This path is the closest match to the Playbook's "private, long term — Rolex, Augusta, Lego" inspiration. It's a sale that doesn't feel like a sale: the brand stays itself, the founder stays involved, the capital partner provides liquidity to Dan and operating support to the team. It's also the path where the founder retains the most cultural authority post-deal.
Realistic family-office / HoldCo set at the $20M-$80M tier
| Acquirer / Type | Why they'd care | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pritzker Private Capital | Pritzker family office; permanent capital; consumer brands history. Prefers founder-aligned deals with long horizons. | High bar for quality; long-term hold |
| JAB Holdings (Reimann family) | Owns Krispy Kreme, Panera, Pret, Caribou. Increasingly PE-style but family-controlled. | Probably too big for $75M deal; large-cap leaning |
| Brentwood Associates | Mid-market PE with family-office posture; consumer-brand specialist; longer holds (8-10+ years). | Patient capital |
| VMG Partners | Consumer-brand focused; positions as growth partner not flip-buyer for some deals. | More PE than family office in practice |
| Single-family offices doing direct CPG | Walton, Pritzker, Anschutz, Pohlad, Newhouse, Dorrance, Kaiser. Often quiet direct deals. | Hardest to source — requires John Replogle network |
| HoldCos building consumer portfolios | Endurance Search Partners, Heritage Brand Partners, Compass Diversified, Tinicum, NextGen Foods, Permanent Equity (Mark Brooks). | More accessible than single-family offices; often operator-investors |
| The "Permanent Equity" wave | Search-fund-style HoldCos that explicitly commit to indefinite holds; founder-friendly structures; typically $10M-$50M deals. | Best-fit cultural alignment for "Rolex/Augusta/Lego" framing |
| Beauty-industry family offices | Less visible but exist — Lauder family beyond Estée Lauder corporate; family offices of beauty-conglomerate scions. | Worth asking John Replogle about specific connections |
Family office pricing dynamics: Family offices typically pay slightly lower headline multiples than strategics (8-12x EBITDA vs. 10-15x) but offer better deal terms — equity rollover, seller financing, founder optionality, no aggressive earn-out pressure. Total economic value to Dan can be similar or better, especially with a meaningful equity rollover.
Why Permanent Equity is the headline #1 cultural fit: Mark Brooks's Permanent Equity has explicitly built a permanent-capital model around "we never sell." It's run by operators, for operators. They've held some of their portfolio companies indefinitely. The "Rolex/Augusta/Lego" framing in the Playbook is essentially the Permanent Equity thesis written in Dan's own words. Worth a direct conversation early — they're founder-friendly and culture-first.
How the parallel paths coexist operationally
The two paths sound different but require building almost identical traits. That's the strategic insight: Dan doesn't have to choose between them in 2026 or 2027. He optimizes for both, and either becomes a real option at the 2028-2030 inflection.
| Trait | Strategic fold-in | Family office | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Defensible category position | ✓ #1 in clean home fragrance | ✓ Durable moat | Same |
| Profitable / EBITDA-positive | ✓ Improves multiple | ✓ Required (cash-generating) | Family office is harder on this |
| Clean financials, audit-ready | ✓ DD must close in 60-90 days | ✓ DD must close in 60-120 days | Same |
| Founder visible / engaged | ✓ Through 12-24 month earn-in | ✓ Through 3-5+ year stay-on | Family office wants longer commitment |
| Repeat / recurring revenue | ✓ Diffuser refill subscription | ✓ Essential to "permanent capital" | Family office values this more |
| Hero retail anchor | ✓ Proves category leadership | ✓ But less critical | Strategic needs this more |
| Clean cap table | ✓ Required | ✓ Required | Same — Glen review |
| Strong management team | ✓ For transition | ✓ For stay-on operating | Same |
| Multi-platform media engine | ✓ Brand operates without founder | ✓ Same | Same |
The only real divergence: Strategic acquirers want growth-rate signal (30%+ YoY at scale) more than family offices do. Family offices weight stability and predictability more.
Both are achievable simultaneously: 30% growth + 20% EBITDA is the sweet spot that opens both doors. That's not contradictory to the Playbook's stated targets — 42% growth and 20% profit — it's actually the same operating goal stated differently.
Mapping back to the Playbook's three paths
The Playbook (October 2025) named three paths: Lifestyle Business, Accelerated Exit, Professional Management. Mapping:
- Playbook "Lifestyle Business" = Path 3 (Independent / "no exit"). Always preserved.
- Playbook "Accelerated Exit" = Path 1 (Strategic fold-in). Promoted to first-tier.
- Playbook "Professional Management" = a posture for the founder, not an exit type. Can apply to Path 1, Path 2, or Path 3. The decision to install a CEO and transition to Exec Chair is independent of which exit path is chosen.
Path 2 (family office) is missing from the original Playbook. This is the meaningful update. It's the path most aligned with the "private, long-term, Rolex/Augusta/Lego" philosophy already in the Playbook, and it deserves first-tier planning attention alongside Path 1.
Refined "traits to build" prioritization
Working from the dual-path framework, here's a refinement of Part I's eight traits — by priority for Dan's preferred paths:
Tier 1 — matters most for both Path 1 and Path 2
- Profitability + clean financials — both paths require it. Break-even by EOY 2026 is the foundation.
- Defensible category position — both want category leadership in clean home fragrance. The diffuser launch and the "real fragrance" positioning are the work.
- Refill subscription / recurring revenue — both paths value it; family offices weight it disproportionately.
- Brand voice that matches "painkiller, not vitamin" — necessary to read as durable, not faddy.
Tier 2 — matters more for Path 1, still useful for Path 2
- Hero retail anchor — proves category leadership; less essential for family office but still positive.
- Multi-platform media engine — proves the brand can operate without founder dependency.
- Founder cadence on content — required through close and 12-24 months after.
Tier 3 — Path 2 specifically values
- Operator team that can run without Dan — permanent-capital partners want this so the brand keeps compounding regardless of founder presence. For Path 2, building Whitney / Katelyn / Nikita into clear domain leaders is part of the exit asset.
- Founder optionality / extended runway — family-office deals often include "Dan stays as CEO 3-5 years, then transitions" rather than "Dan signs an earn-out and leaves."
Tier 4 — PE-only (deprioritized)
- Aggressive growth narrative — only matters for PE.
- Recapital story — only matters for PE.
Implications for 2026-2027 execution
If Paths 1 and 2 are co-primary, several near-term decisions sharpen:
- Outside capital posture: default to no. Both paths are exit paths, not growth-equity paths. Raising growth capital in 2027 would dilute Dan's eventual take from either path and create pressure to chase PE-style growth. Stay self-funded through break-even. The only exception: a small family-office minority investment that pre-positions Path 2.
- Network priority for John Replogle conversations: two parallel ask-pipelines. (a) Clean-label CPG strategic relationships — Edgewell, Helen of Troy, SC Johnson Lifestyle Brands at the top. (b) Family-office and permanent-capital introductions — Permanent Equity / HoldCo operators and direct family-office consumer-brand investors. John should know we're optimizing for both, not picking one.
- Profit-sharing / equity-grant structure (the 20%-to-staff plan) needs Path-2 review with Glen. Family offices are often more sensitive to equity-grant structure than strategics. If 20% of equity is committed to staff, the family-office buyer is buying 80%. The structure has to be clean, vested, and well-documented before any conversation. Glen review before any equity grants is now a Tier-1 item.
- Operator-team build-out matters more under Path 2. A family-office buyer who wants Dan to stay 3-5 years still wants confidence the team can execute without him after. Whitney as wholesale lead, Katelyn as marketing / brand voice lead, Nikita as CFO-equivalent, and a Performance Marketing Lead hire are all "exit assets" under Path 2 — not just operating hires.
- Audit prep should start in 2027, not 2029. Both paths require audited (not just reviewed) financials. The Datahub work + Nikita's QB sub-account work is the foundation. Adding a low-cost annual audit by Q4 2027 makes both paths cleanly executable in 2028.
- The "no rush, no sell" floor stays preserved. Path 3 (Independent) is the always-available baseline. The whole point of building toward Paths 1 and 2 in parallel is that Dan keeps optionality — including the option to do neither and keep running the business as a profitable lifestyle company indefinitely.
Open questions for the Playbook v2 consolidation
- Confirm the dual-path framing is right. Are Paths 1 + 2 + 3 the intended menu, with Paths 4-8 as awareness-only?
- Glen conversation on Path-2 implications for the 20%-to-staff equity-grant plan — family-office buyers' typical preferences on staff equity vs. profit-share-only structures.
- John Replogle conversation: the two parallel ask-pipelines. What's his current network depth in family-office / HoldCo consumer-brand territory vs. clean-label CPG strategic territory?
- Permanent Equity / HoldCo operator outreach: who's the right first introduction? Mark Brooks at Permanent Equity is the obvious test case.
- The "founder stays 3-5 years post-sale" version of Path 2 needs Dan's gut check. Is the longer founder commitment a feature or a bug, given the Exec Chair preference?