Wholesale

Dial In Your Wholesale – Stop The Leaks Before They Drain Your Margin

By David Schwartz, Partner, SOS
david@sosbusinessdevelopment.com

Wholesale should be the steady, predictable revenue engine of a coffee or specialty food company. Instead, for many founders, it’s a quiet leak.

Accounts that don’t reorder.
Pricing that hasn’t been adjusted in years.
Sales reps “working on it.”
Distributors sitting on stagnant SKUs.
Margins that look fine on paper—but thin in reality.

You don’t notice the leak in one dramatic moment. You notice it when cash feels tight even though volume is “up.” That’s not a volume problem. That’s a wholesale problem.

What Is “Wholesale Leaking”?

Wholesale leaking is incremental revenue and margin loss happening across your channel without visibility or correction. It shows up in subtle ways:

  • Accounts ordering 10% less each quarter
  • Special pricing never revisited
  • Freight quietly eating margin
  • Reps closing low-quality accounts
  • Distributors favoring other brands
  • No system for reactivation
  • No accountability for follow-through

It’s not dramatic. It’s operational. And operational problems compound. “Most founders think they need more accounts. In reality, they need to fix the accounts they already have.”
— David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

Why Wholesale Leaks Happen

Founders and operators are stretched thin. Roasting, sourcing, payroll, marketing, production. Wholesale becomes reactive.

Someone places an order.
Someone answers an email.
Someone promises to “follow up.”

But no one owns the system. And wholesale without a system always leaks. “Wholesale is not a sales activity. It’s a channel. And channels require structure.” — David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

The 7 Most Common Wholesale Leaks

  1. Unexamined Pricing
    • Legacy pricing left untouched for years
    • Freight and input costs absorbed quietly
    • No tier discipline
  2. Dead or Dormant Accounts
    • No reactivation cadence
    • No structured follow-up
    • No segmentation by potential value
  3. Distributor Drift
    • No regular check-ins
    • No account mapping
    • No velocity tracking
  4. No Clear Ideal Account Profile
    • “Anyone who wants to buy” becomes the strategy
    • Poor-fit accounts drain service resources
  5. Sales Without Margin Discipline
    • Discounts to close deals
    • No minimum standards
  6. No Channel Strategy
    • Cafés, grocery, foodservice, hospitality all treated the same
    • No focused push
  7. No Owner-Level Oversight
    • Wholesale delegated but not directed

“You can’t fix what you don’t measure. Most wholesale operations aren’t measured — they’re tolerated.”
— David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

What “Dialed In” Wholesale Looks Like

When wholesale is dialed in, you see:

  • Clear pricing architecture
  • Defined ideal account profile
  • Segment-specific messaging
  • Distributor accountability
  • Reactivation systems
  • Margin protection discipline
  • Regular performance reviews

It’s calm. Structured. Predictable. And profitable. “Dialed in doesn’t mean aggressive. It means disciplined.” — David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

Volume Is Not the Goal

Many roasters chase wholesale volume. More doors. More accounts. More SKUs. But more undisciplined wholesale simply means more leak points. The goal isn’t volume. The goal is profitable velocity. “A smaller wholesale base with discipline will outperform a bloated account list every time.” — David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

The Real Cost of Ignoring the Leak

Let’s say:

  • You do $2M in wholesale.
  • 8% of that is quietly underperforming or underpriced.
  • That’s $160,000 of erosion.

Not catastrophic. But meaningful. And it compounds annually. Most owners feel the pressure but can’t see the cause. They assume:

  • The market is soft.
  • Competition is tougher.
  • Costs are just higher now.

Sometimes that’s true. Often, it’s leakage.

Dial In Before You Scale

Before you add a sales rep.
Before you go to another trade show.
Before you chase national distribution.

Dial in what you already have.

Review:

  • Pricing discipline
  • Margin by account
  • Account concentration
  • Reorder frequency
  • Sales follow-through
  • Distributor performance

“Founders don’t need more complexity. They need clarity.”
— David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

Final Thought

Wholesale should not feel chaotic. It should feel engineered. If it feels unpredictable, strained, or thinner than it should be, there is likely a leak. And leaks don’t fix themselves. They require direction. They require ownership. They require someone willing to look under the hood. “You don’t grow wholesale by pushing harder. You grow it by tightening it.” — David Schwartz, Partner, SOS

If you run a specialty coffee or specialty food brand and wholesale feels heavier than it should, it may not be a growth problem.

It may simply be time to dial it in.


David Schwartz
Specialty Food + Coffee
Outsourced Executive Sales + Marketing Director
Phone 760.636.4559
Inquire
Email

Give Wholesale A Better Shot – Why Specialty Coffee and Food Producers Should Rethink and Rebuild Their Wholesale Channel

By David Schwartz, Partner, SOS
david@sosbusinessdevelopment.com

Most specialty brands have a wholesale website page. Few have a wholesale strategy.

Wholesale often starts reactively — a café calls, a retailer inquires, a distributor reaches out. You say yes and hope it grows.

But without structure, it doesn’t.

Read more: Give Wholesale A Better Shot – Why Specialty Coffee and Food Producers Should Rethink and Rebuild Their Wholesale Channel

Wholesale plateaus. Margins erode. Follow-up breaks down. Leads go stale. Founders get frustrated.

That’s not a channel problem. It’s a strategy problem.

“Most founders think they have a sales problem,” says David Schwartz, SOS Partner and Outsourced Sales and Marketing Director. “In reality, they have a channel strategy problem. The sales team can’t close what hasn’t been clearly positioned and structured.”

Why Wholesale Matters More Than Ever

The specialty sectors aren’t shrinking. They’re expanding.

 Global Specialty Coffee Growth
The global specialty coffee market was valued at over $110 billion in 2025 and projected to exceed $300 billion within the next decade, growing at roughly 10% annually.

 U.S. Specialty Food Market Strength
The U.S. specialty food market now represents over $200 billion in annual retail sales, according to industry trade data, with consistent multi-year growth driven by premium positioning and consumer demand for differentiated products.

That’s not niche demand. That’s structural market momentum.

And most of that volume moves through wholesale channels — retail stores, cafés, restaurants, specialty markets, and foodservice.

If your wholesale channel is underbuilt, you’re under-capturing growth that already exists.

The Leaks That Kill Wholesale Performance

Across specialty coffee and food brands, the same issues recur:

  1. Undifferentiated pitch — “We’re high quality” isn’t a strategy.
  2. Loose pricing — inconsistent discounting erodes margin.
  3. No defined account profile — anyone becomes a lead.
  4. No sales process — follow-up is reactive and undocumented.
  5. Founder bottlenecks — every deal routes back to the owner.

“Wholesale shouldn’t feel random,” says Schwartz. “When it feels random, you’re leaving revenue and margin on the table.”

The Business Case for Wholesale

When structured properly, wholesale delivers:

Predictable revenue
Recurring orders stabilize cash flow.

Operational efficiency
Larger production runs improve margin control.

Lower acquisition cost
One strong account can equal hundreds of retail customers.

Market authority
Strategic placements build credibility and brand reach.

Scalable growth
You grow distribution without adding retail overhead.

For specialty food producers especially, wholesale often represents the primary path to scale — through regional grocery chains, distributors, and foodservice partnerships.

What “A Better Shot” Actually Means

Giving wholesale a better shot isn’t about more activity.

It’s about tightening the system:

  • Defined ideal account profile
  • Real margin math
  • Structured outreach
  • Clear close process
  • Managed execution

“You don’t fix wholesale by sending more sales emails,” Schwartz explains. “You fix it by clarifying who you’re for, what problem you solve, and how your accounts win by working with you.”

That clarity improves close rates.
It protects margin.
It reduces wasted effort.

David Schwartz
Specialty Food + Coffee
Outsourced Executive Sales + Marketing Director
Phone 760.636.4559
Inquire
Website
Email