EPISODE · Jun 26, 2026 · 11 MIN
How Harry's Built a Direct-to-Consumer Brand That Warby Parker Couldn't
from Business Models Explained with Fexingo: Subscription, Marketplace, SaaS, and Service Companies · host Fexingo
Episode 75 of Business Models Explained dives into the direct-to-consumer razor brand Harry's and the subscription model that helped it disrupt an entrenched market dominated by Gillette. Lucas and Luna break down how Harry's vertically integrated manufacturing, built a distinctive brand around design and values, and acquired a German blade factory to control its supply chain. They discuss the company's 2019 acquisition by Edgewell Personal Care for $1.37 billion, the subsequent antitrust challenge from the FTC, and what the failed merger reveals about the limits of DTC disruption in consumer goods. The episode also explores how Harry's subsequent pivot to retail partnerships with Target and Walmart changed its unit economics and customer acquisition strategy. A specific lesson emerges: subscription models work best when the product has predictable replenishment cycles and the brand can sustain a premium without relying solely on Facebook ads. #Harrys #DirectToConsumer #SubscriptionModel #D2C #Razors #WarbyParker #Gillette #Edgewell #FTC #Antitrust #VerticalIntegration #BrandBuilding #CustomerAcquisition #UnitEconomics #RetailPartnerships #Business #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
What this episode covers
Episode 75 of Business Models Explained dives into the direct-to-consumer razor brand Harry's and the subscription model that helped it disrupt an entrenched market dominated by Gillette. Lucas and Luna break down how Harry's vertically integrated manufacturing, built a distinctive brand around design and values, and acquired a German blade factory to control its supply chain. They discuss the company's 2019 acquisition by Edgewell Personal Care for $1.37 billion, the subsequent antitrust challenge from the FTC, and what the failed merger reveals about the limits of DTC disruption in consumer goods. The episode also explores how Harry's subsequent pivot to retail partnerships with Target and Walmart changed its unit economics and customer acquisition strategy. A specific lesson emerges: subscription models work best when the product has predictable replenishment cycles and the brand can sustain a premium without relying solely on Facebook ads. #Harrys #DirectToConsumer #SubscriptionModel #D2C #Razors #WarbyParker #Gillette #Edgewell #FTC #Antitrust #VerticalIntegration #BrandBuilding #CustomerAcquisition #UnitEconomics #RetailPartnerships #Business #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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How Harry's Built a Direct-to-Consumer Brand That Warby Parker Couldn't
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