Sales Nexus CRM

Mitch Gould Shares Retail Playbook for Brand Entry into Major U.S. Retailers

By FisherVista
Retail distribution strategist Mitch Gould outlines the comprehensive preparation and strategy needed for brands to secure placement with major U.S. retailers like Walmart, Target, and Amazon, emphasizing operational readiness and coordinated systems over mere product quality.

Found this article helpful?

Share it with your network and spread the knowledge!

Mitch Gould Shares Retail Playbook for Brand Entry into Major U.S. Retailers

Nutrition expert and retail distribution strategist Mitch Gould is sharing the strategies and lessons that helped products secure placement with some of the largest retailers in the United States. Known for helping international and emerging brands navigate the complexities of entering the U.S. market, Gould has spent more than three decades working across retail distribution, product positioning, logistics, marketing, and sales strategy.

Throughout his career, Gould has worked with brands that have successfully entered major retail channels including Walmart, Target, Costco, GNC, CVS, Walgreens, 7-Eleven, Home Depot, Lowe's, and Amazon. He is also widely recognized for helping support the early growth of Amazon's sports nutrition category during its formative years, contributing to the evolution of online nutrition retail as consumer purchasing habits rapidly shifted toward eCommerce.

“Getting a product into a major retailer is about far more than having a good idea or attractive packaging,” said Mitch Gould, Founder and CEO of Nutritional Products International. “Retailers want to know that you understand logistics, inventory management, pricing strategy, consumer demand, compliance, marketing support, and long-term brand positioning. Successful retail placement requires preparation, infrastructure, and execution.”

Over the years, Gould developed what became known as the Evolution of Distribution platform, a business model designed to help brands streamline entry into the United States while reducing many of the operational and strategic barriers that often prevent companies from scaling successfully. The model operates through several core pillars: Global Logistics & U.S. Market Entry, Product Readiness & Regulatory Alignment, Market Positioning & Brand Strategy, Retail & eCommerce Placement, and Post-Placement Marketing & Demand Generation.

According to Gould, one of the biggest misconceptions among brands is believing that retail success begins with pitching buyers. In reality, he says, most successful retail programs begin long before the first buyer meeting. “Retailers are constantly evaluating risk,” Gould explained. “If a company is not operationally prepared, if the pricing structure is unrealistic, if the product positioning is unclear, or if there is no long-term marketing support, the opportunity often ends before it begins.”

Gould noted that while retail channels continue evolving, the core fundamentals of successful distribution remain largely unchanged: operational readiness, consumer demand, consistency, and the ability to support growth at scale. As retail competition intensifies and more international brands seek entry into the U.S. market, Gould believes education and preparation are becoming increasingly important for long-term success.

“The United States remains the largest consumer market in the world,” Gould said. “But entering it successfully requires more than simply shipping products overseas. Companies need a complete strategy that connects logistics, retail readiness, distribution, and marketing into one coordinated system.”

For brands looking to break into major retailers, Gould's insights underscore the need to build a robust infrastructure and partner with experienced firms like Nutritional Products International (NPI), which offers the Evolution of Distribution platform to guide products from concept to shelf. Gould himself has a track record of working with iconic brands and celebrities, including Steven Seagal, Hulk Hogan, Ronnie Coleman, and Wayne Gretzky.

This news matters because the U.S. retail market remains the world's largest, and successful entry can be transformative for brands. However, as Gould emphasizes, preparation and a coordinated strategy are key to overcoming the operational and strategic barriers that trip up many companies. The implications are significant: brands that ignore these fundamentals may struggle to gain traction, while those that invest in readiness and partner with experts can unlock substantial growth opportunities in the competitive U.S. retail landscape.

FisherVista

FisherVista

@fishervista