Are retail gift sets economically viable as a product strategy?
Retail gift sets are generally not a strong margin play and carry significant hidden costs that often make them uneconomical. **The core issue:** While you achieve similar cash margin to a single bottle on spirits, the gross margin is worse due to cardboard, assembly labour, and postage breakage. Members recommend approaching gift sets as a **brand-awareness and seasonal-peak tactic** (Christmas, gifting occasions) rather than a margin driver.
**Key challenges members flagged:** - **Assembly costs** — either internal labour (time-consuming) or outsourced (paid labour eats margin) - **Cardboard costs** — expensive in small volumes; the temptation to over-order at volume discounts often leads to dead stock and writeoffs - **Postage breakage** — products easily break in transit, increasing returns and goodwill costs - **Poor sell-through** — one member ordered 1,000 units for Christmas and sold only 100, resulting in a net loss overall - **Retailer margin squeeze** — if you sell a gift pack at £11 wholesale, it typically lands on shelf at £25, meaning retailers take substantial margin - **Market resistance** — gifting over the £20 price point is a tough sell in the current market (mini gift sets are the exception, showing growth)
**When to consider them:** Only if the strategic goal is tapping into predictable gifting peaks or building brand awareness, not margin. Members suggest treating them as a seasonal, limited-run tactic rather than a core SKU.
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