Warby Parker Kills It's Signature Home Try-On Program - What This Means for Growth | Fast Five Shorts
Warby Parker is ending its iconic Home Try-On program by year-end, citing that most customers now live within 30 minutes of a store. Sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, and Quorso.
Chris and Anne analyze what this cost-cutting move signals about Warby's growth challenges and whether the Target partnership can fill the gap.
For the full episode head here: youtu.be/wKzV_5mqg64
Topics: Warby Parker strategy, home try-on program, eyewear retail, store expansion
#WarbyParker #eyewear #retail #directtoconsumer #strategy
Warby Parker plans to end its Home Try on program as it focuses on its stores and digital experience.
Speaker AAccording to retail dive, Warby Parker will sunset its Home Try on program by the end of the year, executives said on a call.
Speaker AThe eyewear company said the vast majority of recent Home Try on users live within 30 minutes of a Warby Parker store.
Speaker AChris, what does this move to cancel in Home Try on say about the future of Warby Parker?
Speaker BI think it says there's a lot more to this story than meets the eye.
Speaker BAnd see what I did.
Speaker AOh, good.
Speaker AI'm so glad you had that opportunity.
Speaker AContinue, please.
Speaker BAnd the reason I say that is I've often wondered aloud on this show why Warby Parker has been growing so slowly.
Speaker BBecause according to the article, Warby has approximately 300 stores and has been around for almost 15 years.
Speaker BSo if you're keeping score at home, folks, that's 20 stores per year in what is honestly a relatively small footprint.
Speaker BSo I think relatively speaking, it should roll out a little bit faster because it takes less capital when it's a smaller footprint.
Speaker BAnd now they're saying in the article that all of their customers live within 30 minutes of the store.
Speaker BYeah, well, if your stores are only in, in dense urban areas, yeah, that's probably true.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo if I'm reading between the lines and understand what, understand.
Speaker BI mean, what this announcement is trying to say is we no longer need online for the acquisition and that it provides.
Speaker BIt's no longer needed as an acquisition tool in the urban markets and vice versa.
Speaker BIt isn't paying off for us as an acquisition tool in the other markets.
Speaker BSo we're shutting it down because it's too expensive.
Speaker BAnd so then I have to ask myself, with, with that element gone, how different is Warby from another eyewear store?
Speaker BI mean, virtual triad.
Speaker BCome on, seriously.
Speaker BAnd I mean, how many of those things have we tried?
Speaker BHow gimmicky are they?
Speaker BThey never look right on your face, like they look ridiculous half the time.
Speaker AAnd they're not good.
Speaker BNo, they're not good.
Speaker BSo, like, that's not going to be a supplement for this.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd, and more importantly, doesn't it also mean that.
Speaker BThat Warby's growth nationally could soon be constrained?
Speaker BSo, so.
Speaker BAnd that kind of explains the odd decision, I think, to go into Target stores as well.
Speaker BSo something just doesn't smell right to me with this announcement.
Speaker AYeah, I don't know.
Speaker AI think it makes sense from a financial standpoint.
Speaker AI think if you're, if you're looking at the Spread home try on is incredibly expensive.
Speaker AAnd, and the return, again to your point, like the return on that, you know, even if somebody gets those five glasses, are they deciding how many pairs of glasses you try on?
Speaker AWhen you go look at glasses, it's probably more than five.
Speaker ALike how many times does that go happening?
Speaker ALike, I just, I think there's a lot of waste.
Speaker AAnd so this feels like a smart financial decision to just cut the fat there.
Speaker ABut the big questions for me now are, you know, even though they live within 30 miles of stores, are people going to drive to the Warby Parker stores?
Speaker ALike, are, are they going to continue to get the volume that they're seeing right now with the existing store count that they have?
Speaker AMaybe now that they've added like the, the eye exams and the doctors in the store, like that's something people have to do.
Speaker ASo you're kind of, you're kind of creating that one stop shop.
Speaker ABut then my other question is, you can they scale that great store experience?
Speaker ABecause they do have a high level.
Speaker ALike there's so many employees in that store.
Speaker AThere's a certain kind of educated employee that's working in that store that in a, in a tightened labor market, like, I just wonder if they're going to be able to keep that up because if they can't pay that off and they don't have home try on anymore, there's no difference between them and every other player out there selling classes online.
Speaker ASo that's that.
Speaker AThose are the real questions for me.
Speaker AAnd then finally, will that Target partnership pay off for them?
Speaker AThat's going to be a big question.
Speaker AThey've got five stores right now, but knowing, knowing that Target's going to have some extra floor space coming up available In August of 2026, will they figure out like, we have to be in more areas, we have to take more advantage of this Target partnership, or does it just completely go away and, and they're stuck with their, their 300 stores?
Speaker BI got to get over and see that too.
Speaker BI guess it's a, over in Bloomington.
Speaker BI got to go check it out.
Speaker AYeah, I mean it looks great.
Speaker AIt's right up front.
Speaker AIt's in a good spot.
Speaker ABut what will traffic look like?
Speaker BThat's the question.
Speaker BThe big net net question that you and I have then is like, where's the growth opportunity coming from?
Speaker BHow are they going to continue to scale if this goes away?
Speaker BSo interesting.