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Life in the fast chain
To:Brew Readers
Retail Brew // Morning Brew // Update
Dibs Beauty’s CEO on tariffs.

Hi, it’s Friday, and we have, well, breakup news from the retail beauty world. Target and Ulta have decided to part ways and end their joint shop-in-shop venture in 2026. Back in April, Ulta hit pause on rolling out more locations inside Target. Guess they finally decided on no more make-up dates.

In today’s edition:

—Vidhi Choudhary, Erin Cabrey, Alex Vuocolo

SUPPLY CHAIN

Dibs Beauty CEO speaking on a panel at Retail Brew's Retail Rewired event in NYC

Jonathan Heisler Photography

The future of Dibs Beauty is all about retail expansion.

Founded in September 2021, the brand famous for its two-in-one blush and bronzer sticks, has grown through influencer marketing and social shopping strategies. It has also received funding from consumer-focused private equity firm L Catterton. Ask Dibs’s co-founder and CEO, Jeff Lee, why everyone wants to sell beauty online and he has a deep answer: “People have an emotional attachment to it.”

We caught up with Lee recently on the sidelines of Retail Brew’s Rewiring Retail: Mastering Data, Inventory, and the Online Customer Experience in New York City about tariffs, AI, and the holiday season.

What can you tell us about changes that you’ve made at Dibs Beauty because of tariffs?
You control the panic. That’s the first thing. It’s emotional more than anything. When the tariffs are changing constantly, all you can do is the best, which is—first of all, plan. Get as much inventory as you can and just scenario-plan. That’s all you can do.

Keep reading here.—VC

From The Crew

E-COMMERCE

Perishable groceries and home goods from Amazon

Amazon

As online grocery sales continue to soar, Amazon this week announced its latest bid to become a digital grocery powerhouse and compete with Walmart. Consumers can now purchase perishable grocery items through its same-day delivery service.

The service is now available to shoppers in 1,000 locations across the US, and the e-comm giant said that’ll expand to 2,300 by the end of the year. Perishable items include produce, dairy, meat, baked goods, and frozen offerings, which can also be ordered alongside any other Amazon products in the same cart.

The move could help Amazon, which has found muted success in the fresh grocery space, compete with its biggest same-day delivery rival, Walmart, which is the top digital grocery retailer in the US, per eMarketer.

Keep reading here.—EC

SWAPPING SKUS

Today’s top retail reads.

Bagging sales: Fashion houses are tempting shoppers with cheaper add-ons like bag charms amid pullback. (Bloomberg)

Growth wave: Klarna’s revenue surged in Q2, fueled by accelerating growth in the US. (the Wall Street Journal)

Prescription pressure: Costco dropped plans to offer abortion pill mifepristone under pressure from faith-based activists. (Reuters)

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