Clicks, Bricks, and Heavy Lifts: Decoding the Divergent Retail Playbooks of Gymshark and Squat Wolf

In this issue, Alex Andarakis, the Founder and Managing Director of Andarakis Advisory Services, explores the diverging retail strategies of Gymshark and Squat Wolf as they navigate the high-stakes transition from digitally native disruptors to physical retail powerhouses. While both brands achieved rapid scale through the Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) model—leveraging influencer ecosystems and social media dominance—their shift into brick-and-mortar storefronts reveals two distinct philosophies. Gymshark’s global strategy prioritizes “experience hubs” designed for community immersion and content creation, whereas Squat Wolf focuses on regional market penetration, using high-footfall mall locations to reach new, non-digital customer segments. By comparing these two journeys, Andarakis highlights that success in the “clicks-to-bricks” era is rarely one-size-fits-all, requiring a delicate balance between brand storytelling and operational efficiency.

Key take aways:

  1. 1. Experience vs. Accessibility: Gymshark utilizes physical stores as experiential hubs for community engagement and content creation, while Squat Wolf views retail primarily as a high-impact channel for immediate product accessibility and sales growth.
  2. 2. Depth vs. Breadth: Gymshark’s retail model is designed to deepen engagement with an existing global digital audience, whereas Squat Wolf uses its mall presence to expand its breadth, capturing new, non-digital customers and tourists.
  3. 3. Strategic Maturity: The transition highlights that Gymshark has achieved a mature, integrated omnichannel ecosystem, while Squat Wolf is currently leveraging traditional retail presence to sustainably scale its regional footprint and market penetration.

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