Editors note: This is a guest submission by Paul Calento, Co-Founder and CEO, CannaVu
The cannabis space is red hot right now, with newly powerful Democratic leaders saying they plan to make reform legislation a key priority in the current Congress. Over the past year of the pandemic, the industry has seen massive gains as many states with âstay in placeâ mandates identified the category as an âessential service.â Nevertheless, we have yet to see a major national player emerge as a ubiquitous brand, either on the retail or product level. If you work or heavily consume in the space, you might have become familiar with some of the playersâbut thereâs no Pepsi or Kleenex in the industry by any stretch of the imagination.
Thereâs a good reason for that, of course: Cannabis is still prohibited at the federal level. However, it would be silly to think that major players arenât eyeing this space and aligning themselves for the inevitable moment when that all changes. And rest assured, when this space moves, itâs going to move fast.
So, whatâs it going to look like when national cannabis brands finally do emerge on the scene? Letâs take a look.
Theyâll Enter Through CBD
The biggest area to watch right now, in terms of identifying the companies likely to take cannabis by storm, is the CBD space. The CBD industry is far more hospitable to national brand-building than cannabis right now. CBD products are already sold in all 50 states thanks to the 2018 Farm Bill, and CBD products can be transported across state lines. CBD companies can use the same brand in all markets, and they also have the ability to work with national retail chains.
Perhaps most importantly, CBD is at a tipping point when it comes to mainstream acceptance and adoption. This is even more so the case in this new era of social distancing, which is exacerbating the demand drivers (pain, anxiety, sleep issues) leading a consumer to purchase a CBD product for the first time. This hasnât gone unnoticed. For example, Dosist, an innovator in dose-controlled cannabis therapy, recently expanded its previously THC-focused product line into no-THC CBD products. This will allow the brand to expand its footprint in cannabis, possibly years before they actually are in a position to grow that business.
At present, âCBDâ itself is the âbrandâ known to most consumers. Because of that, in the short term, it seems likely that brands with âCBDâ in their names, or an implied medical affiliation, will have an advantage. Longer-term, weâre going to see CBD touted more as an active ingredientâthink of it as the NutraSweet of health and wellness.
The CBD brands to watch will be the ones with prominent advertising and, increasingly, broad distribution at physical retail. While the effect of the latter will be muted over the next few months, amid the COVID-19 retail shutdowns, pervasive distribution mid-to-long-term will be key to positioning a brand for a smooth transition into cannabis.
The Focus Wonât Be on Vertical Integration
In addition to emerging from the CBD space, itâs a pretty safe bet that the first major national cannabis players wonât be ones that have exhausted themselves on vertical integration. In these early days of cannabis, weâve seen a number of companies attempt to fully own the CBD and cannabis supply chainâfrom growing to processing to distributing to brand-building to selling. Itâs an understandable inclination, given the level of control and oversight that vertical integration brings. But itâs also exhausting and ultimately unsustainable for most. McKinsey identifies the threats of vertical integration as âcomplex, expensive and hard to reverse,â and companies are increasingly recognizing the truth in that when it comes to CBD and cannabis.
There are plenty of examples of well-known brands in other sectors that have built deeply vertically integrated businesses and then walked away from that model. At one point, IBM â the quintessential tech product companyâwas vertically integrated, but the company divested its personal computer and printer businesses in order to focus on services.
In late February, Ryan Lissack, CEO at MedMenâpossibly the most well-known vertically integrated multi-site dispensary operatorâannounced a move away from growing and producing cannabis products. âWhile vertical integration has been a big focus for the industry, our growing belief is that cannabis is evolving like every other consumer vertical: with a fragmented value chain and specialists at each layer,â said Lissack during the companyâs Q2 earnings announcement.
By specializing in a more limited group of activities and partnering for the remaining pieces, companies will have a clearer path to scale and profitability on a national brand level. In time, they might end up vertically integratedâbut that would be a long-term destination rather than the initial path they choose to follow.
Today, it would be virtually impossible to build a national cannabis brand, given the current regulatory climate. But the landslide toward widespread legalization is underway, and forward-looking companies of all sizes are now positioning themselves for the future. The advantage lies with companies already known in the healthcare space, versus pure-play canna-brands. Itâs these companiesâthe ones with effective and existing lobbies, with both medical and retail presencesâthat will likely buy the best CBD and canna brands in order to leverage their existing infrastructures. In that regard, the companies with known and effective brandsânot ones that merely serve the segment with THC or CBD, but those providing intrinsic customer value and brand recognitionâwill be the most desirable acquisitions and sell at the highest multiples.
2 comments
Daniel
February 16, 2021 at 7:52 am
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Joseph
August 28, 2023 at 6:54 am
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