Scaling Smarter: Lessons from Matt's Chats ÒÁÈËÖ±²¥ Distribution and Waterdrop

Faith Artieda • June 22, 2026

There's no shortage of advice for growing ecommerce brands.


Buy more ads. Expand channels. Launch new products. Add more technology.


But during a recent Matt's Chats webinar, one message came through loud and clear: growth isn't usually what breaks a business. Complexity does.


Hosted by Matt Hertz of Third Person, the conversation brought together Barrett Distribution's , Waterdrop's Head of U.S. Operations , and Yuzu Co-Founder Drew Carpenter to discuss the realities of scaling modern ecommerce operations. What followed wasn't a discussion about growth hacks or overnight success stories.


Instead, it was an honest look at the operational decisions that determine whether a brand thrives or stalls as it grows.


"I Consistently Come Back to the People"

When Matt asked what challenges growing brands face today, Brian Corbett's answer wasn't technology, automation, or AI.

It was people.


"I consistently come back to the people," Corbett said when discussing what separates successful operations from struggling ones.


After more than a decade in supply chain and logistics—and years as an entrepreneur before that—Corbett explained that operational breakdowns often happen when brands enter new channels without the right expertise behind them.


A company may have mastered direct-to-consumer fulfillment, but adding retail compliance, wholesale distribution, or major retail partners introduces entirely new requirements. Suddenly, mistakes that never mattered before become expensive problems.

His point was simple but important: software matters, but experience matters just as much.


"The right GM can walk out on the floor and identify a poorly labeled pallet in three seconds because they've seen it for ten years."

That's the kind of expertise that can't be downloaded or installed.


Growth Creates New Problems

Courtney Schick offered a brand-side perspective that many ecommerce operators will recognize immediately.


For Waterdrop, growth isn't just about selling more products. It's about making sure products are available exactly where customers expect them.


"Having the right product at the right time in the right places."


Simple in theory.


In reality, it's one of the most difficult challenges in supply chain management. As brands expand across ÒÁÈËÖ±²¥, Amazon, retail, and wholesale channels, inventory planning becomes increasingly complex. Demand spikes, channel requirements, replenishment schedules, and forecasting accuracy all become interconnected.


One operational issue quickly becomes a customer experience issue.


And one customer experience issue can quickly become a growth issue.


The Case for Simplicity

One of the most interesting moments came during a discussion about multi-channel fulfillment.


Should brands use different fulfillment providers for different channels?


Schick's answer was immediate. "My personal preference is to have one provider that can do all those things for you."


Corbett didn't disagree.


In fact, he pointed to a broader trend he sees across the industry."Brands are consolidating."


Rather than spreading inventory across multiple providers and facilities, many companies are simplifying their networks to reduce complexity, improve visibility, and create operational consistency. The logic is straightforward.


Managing three fulfillment providers isn't just three times harder than managing one. It often creates entirely new problems around inventory visibility, communication, reporting, and customer service.


For many brands, simplification has become a competitive advantage.


The Unsexy Work That Matters Most

Toward the end of the discussion, Matt asked a question every operator should think about:


Where should brands be investing their time and resources right now?


There was no discussion about revolutionary technology or secret growth tactics. Instead, the conversation focused on something much more fundamental.


Data.


For Waterdrop, Schick explained that one of their biggest initiatives is improving master data accuracy across the organization. Clean data impacts reporting, inventory management, forecasting, and decision-making throughout the business.


Corbett expanded on that idea."Clean up your data. Clean up your SKUs."


He also emphasized the importance of SKU retirement programs—removing products that no longer contribute meaningful value to the business. Excess inventory, poor data, and bloated product catalogs create friction that slows growth and reduces profitability.


It's not glamorous work. But it works.


As Corbett joked, it's a little like cleaning a bathroom.


Nobody wants to do it.

Everyone benefits when it's done.


A Reminder for Growing Brands

The biggest takeaway from the conversation wasn't about technology or fulfillment.


It was about discipline.


Successful growth doesn't happen because a company adds more channels, more products, or more software. It happens because they build operational foundations strong enough to support that growth.


The brands that win aren't always the fastest-growing. They're often the ones willing to focus on the fundamentals—great people, clean data, strong partnerships, and operational excellence.


As the webinar demonstrated, those principles may not be flashy.

But they continue to be some of the most reliable drivers of long-term success.

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