Ecommerce was supposed to replace retail entirely. No stores, no salespeople, no middlemen. Just brands selling directly to you online. For a while, it worked. DTC brands like Warby Parker, Allbirds, Casper, Glossier, and Skims raised billions, scaled fast, and helped push old school retail into a full blown collapse. Malls emptied out, big chains went bankrupt, and online shopping looked unstoppable. Then something strange happened. Ecommerce growth slowed. Customer acquisition got expensive. Return rates exploded. And the same online only brands that once bragged about having zero stores started opening them anyway. This video breaks down how the DTC dream took over the 2010s, why it started cracking, and what ecommerce quietly failed to solve. It looks at rising ad costs, bracketing, trust issues, and why seeing products in person still matters more than we like to admit. It also explains why Gen Z, the most online generation ever, actually prefers shopping in stores and how that shift is reshaping malls into experience driven spaces instead of pure shopping hubs. Retail did not die. It adapted. And now, the future of shopping looks a lot more hybrid than anyone expected.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hariharan-jayakumar-silo
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hariharan.jayakumar/
Timestamps:
0:00 - The E-commerce Fantasy
0:40 - The DTC Dream
5:10 - When Growth Gets Expensive
9:40 - The Retail Rebound
Resources:
https://pastebin.com/TfErupnu
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hariharan-jayakumar-silo
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hariharan.jayakumar/
Timestamps:
0:00 - The E-commerce Fantasy
0:40 - The DTC Dream
5:10 - When Growth Gets Expensive
9:40 - The Retail Rebound
Resources:
https://pastebin.com/TfErupnu
- Catégories
- E commerce Divers
- Mots-clés
- return to retail, ecommerce, the death of ecommerce


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