Iverywhere — Business Plan v1

Full rebuild around the target ICP defined in brand-foundation/CUSTOMER_RESEARCH_TARGET.html. v0 (May 22 boilerplate) preserved at BUSINESS_PLAN.html for reference.

Overview

Living document. Last updated: 2026-05-24. Owner: Trevor + Haley McCormick.

Descended from the foundation

This plan is downstream of brand-foundation/. Every customer-facing decision — Section 5 (Market & Customer), Section 6 (Competition), Section 7 (Brand), Section 8 (Product positioning), Section 9 (GTM), Section 10 (Marketing) — descends from CUSTOMER_RESEARCH_TARGET.html. Where a section in this plan conflicts with the foundation, the foundation wins by default. Sections 11–16 (operational) are largely inherited from v0 because they describe execution truth that doesn't shift with positioning.

Status legend: CONFIRMED is fact-on-the-ground. FROM FOUNDATION is lifted from brand-foundation/ and treated as authoritative. ASSUMPTION is reasoned inference needing founder validation. INTERVIEW is placeholder for founder fill-in. TBD is genuinely unknown.


Section 1 — Executive Summary

FROM FOUNDATION

Iverywhere is a premium family travelwear and accessories brand. The core product line — vests, hats, sunglasses, bibs, blankets, eye masks, scarves, and mats — is designed for parents and their children to coordinate thoughtfully and photograph beautifully on their big trip — Italy this year, Sun Valley next.

The customer is busy but she is aspirational; she has young children but she is determined to look put-together, for herself and in front of her Instagram peers, especially on vacation. She is design-conscious: she shops at Shopbop, looks at million-dollar homes on Zillow, and goes to Pilates three times a week. She is willing to spend more on vacations and on the clothes and accessories she'll wear on the trip. She earns at least $200K, and so does her husband. She doesn't want to look like she tries hard, even though she does. Her husband trusts her to spend their money and book amazing trips mostly by herself.

Iverywhere sits in a space the market has not filled. Hill House Home, Doên, Tuckernuck, and Sézane own the aesthetic-mom adult wardrobe. Pink Chicken and Roller Rabbit own the family-matching category but skew matchy and print-heavy. Rylee + Cru, Jamie Kay, Misha & Puff, and Quincy Mae own aspirational-but-purchasable kidswear. Patagonia and Reima own technical outdoor. Babiators owns indestructible kid sunglasses. Nobody owns "tonal, coordinated, parent + child, photographable, packable, mid-luxury family travelwear." The empty middle is the bet.

The brand launches September 1, 2026, with ~$87K already deployed to suppliers across an Italian (vests, scarves, eye masks via Olmetex + Romi srl), Chinese (hats via Jointop, sunglasses via Kanghong, mats via Bei Mei Ti), and US co-design (Leïla Dubus prints, Rudholm & Haak trim) supply chain. Inventory is largely in hand or in transit. Launch posture is DTC Shopify, founder-led content as the primary brand-building engine, and Instagram + Pinterest as the acquisition surfaces. Founders are Trevor McCormick (tech, site, brand-architecture, financials, ops) and Haley McCormick (brand, production, vendor management, sample QC, photography pipeline).

Year-1 ambition: 1,000+ customers, $250–300 AOV driven by coordinated-set bundles, ~50% blended GM, <$40 CAC at organic-first launch posture, 25%+ repeat rate driven by structural family-lifecycle tailwinds. Founder-led and bootstrapped through Year 1; funding decision deferred to Year 2.

The one-line brand promise: Iverywhere makes family travel look like no big deal.


Section 2 — The Company

2.1 Legal & basic facts

CONFIRMED

2.2 Mission

FROM FOUNDATION

Iverywhere makes family travel look like no big deal.

The mission is performative — the brand promise the customer experiences. The kid's coordinating vest, the parent's matching tonal cut, the bib that lives on a bistro table without apology, the mat that comes out of the bag for the park interlude — every product makes the work of family travel invisible. Effort is what the competitor brands signal; effortlessness is what Iverywhere signals.

2.3 Vision

FROM FOUNDATION

The wardrobe brand of the family that travels well. Not the most-traveled family. Not the richest family. The family whose trip looks like they do this all the time — because they do.

2.4 Values

FROM FOUNDATION

  1. Effortlessness over effort-display. The product makes the work invisible. The marketing copy avoids the words "luxurious," "premium," "elevated" — they signal effort.
  2. Coordination, not matching. Same fabric runs, different cuts. Tonal palettes, not literal sets. Pink Chicken / Roller Rabbit own matching; Iverywhere owns coordinating.
  3. Tonal, not loud. Ecru, butter, sage, terracotta, soft navy, sea-glass. Never neon, never characters, never logos visible from a distance.
  4. Foundation-led. Before any product, copy, photo, or partnership ships, the relevant brand-foundation doc is the first read. The foundation is the constant; everything else is execution.
  5. The customer's secret weapon. The highest compliment is "oh, I just had this lying around." The brand earns the right to be invisible inside the customer's own performance.

2.5 Founding story

ASSUMPTION — to be sharpened by Haley

Iverywhere began on the McCormicks' honeymoon — a brand born from travel wanderlust and reborn when the family expanded. The Australia 2026 trip (March, two parents + young daughters, mid-luxury urban itinerary across Manly and Watsons Bay) is the lived proof point: founders who actually travel with their family, with the photo-record to prove the brand they're selling is the brand they live in.

2.6 Why this team

INTERVIEW

Candidate founder-market-fit narrative:


Section 3 — The Opportunity

3.1 The customer insight (the core "aha")

FROM FOUNDATION

The design-conscious mom is performing put-togetherness on Instagram — for her peers, not for hotel concierges. She buys Shopbop, dresses her kids at Hill House Home and Quincy Mae, and is terrified of being "that family" with the Disney bag and matching tees. The market gives her two unsatisfying options: budget matching family (Pink Chicken, Carter's) that looks too matchy, or curated single-brand wardrobes (Hill House Home parent, Misha & Puff kid) that don't coordinate. Nobody is making the coordinated parent + child travel capsule that lets her look effortless without picking it from six different brands. Iverywhere is the pre-curated capsule.

3.2 The problem (restated)

FROM FOUNDATION

  1. Coordination doesn't exist at this aesthetic level. No single brand makes parent + child wardrobe pieces that style together in tonal — non-matching — palettes.
  2. Travel-specific design is rare. Most travel apparel is gym-adjacent (Lululemon, Athleta) or technical-outdoor (Patagonia, Reima). Neither photographs well at a Capri trattoria.
  3. Premium kids brands are siloed. Misha & Puff, Rylee + Cru, Jamie Kay — beautiful, but don't pair with adult lines.
  4. The shopping experience is fragmented. Assembling a coordinated family travel wardrobe takes 6+ brands, three weekends of Shopbop and Pinterest, and a 50% miss rate (color tone wrong, sizes inconsistent, vibe mismatched).
  5. The performance burden is real. The customer is doing the curation work invisibly. Iverywhere offers to do it for her — pre-curated capsule, one purchase, one look.

3.3 Why now

ASSUMPTION


Section 4 — The Solution

4.1 What Iverywhere is

FROM FOUNDATION

A coordinated family travel capsule — vests, hats, sunglasses, bibs, mats, blankets, eye masks, scarves — sized parent + child, in tonal palettes, designed for the dinner-party-host mom who is performing effortlessness across a once-or-twice-a-year real trip. Premium fabric, photographable aesthetic, packable design, no logos visible from a distance.

4.2 The key differentiator: coordinated, not matching

FROM FOUNDATION

Same fabric runs, different cuts. The parent's vest and the kid's vest come from the same bolt of Olmetex Amedeo, in the same tonal palette — but cut differently, sized differently, finished differently. The visual result reads as "obviously a family, obviously curated, obviously not from the same matching set." Pink Chicken matches; Iverywhere coordinates. The distinction is the moat.

4.3 The capsule, not the piece

FROM FOUNDATION

Bundles are not a pricing tactic; bundles are the canonical purchase. The customer's job-to-be-done is "make the family travel-ready without me sourcing from 6 brands" — and Iverywhere's job is to ship the pre-curated kit, not the individual SKUs. The "Italy Capsule" / "Carbon Beach Capsule" / "Ski Week Capsule" are the marketed units; SKUs underneath are the components.

4.4 The travel lens

ASSUMPTION

Designed for the realities of the trip the customer actually takes — airports (layering, packability), hotel lobbies (premium aesthetic, photographable), beach days (durable, washable), restaurants (presentable, mess-containing), villa courtyards (loose, soft, lived-in). Tested against the McCormicks' own family trips (Sydney March 2026 as canonical use case).

4.5 Content as product extension

ASSUMPTION

"On The Way" trip guides — owned content franchise that demonstrates lived expertise. Each guide doubles as: SEO content surface, email-capture lead magnet, brand-voice training data, and gift-with-purchase artifact. The guide is the public-facing proof that the founders live the brand they sell.


Section 5 — Market & Customer (the spine)

Foundation source

This entire section is descended from brand-foundation/CUSTOMER_RESEARCH_TARGET.html. Where conflict arises, the foundation wins.

5.1 Target customer — the persona

FROM FOUNDATION

The Dinner-Party-Host Mom. Design-conscious, Shopbop-shopping, Hill House Home–aspirational. Late 20s to early 40s with her first or second child under 6. Household income $200–500k. Owns a home in a desirable suburb or urban neighborhood — Brooklyn, LA Westside, SF Bay, Austin, Nashville, Charleston, Chicago, suburbs of NYC/Boston, the prettier parts of DC. Internationally: London, Paris, Sydney, Toronto.

She shops at Shopbop, Net-a-Porter (occasionally), Anthropologie, Madewell, Sézane, Tuckernuck, Hill House Home, Doên, Hatch, Reformation, J.Crew premium line, Outdoor Voices, Free People, Roller Rabbit. She dresses her kids at Hill House Home, Pink Chicken, Quincy Mae, Misha & Puff, Goldie + Ace, Rylee + Cru, Jamie Kay, Roller Rabbit. She does not buy kids' clothes at Target. (Bonpoint and Caramel London exist above her tier — occasionally a gift, never the weekly cart.)

She travels one or two "real" trips a year — Europe (Italy, Portugal, France, Spain) every couple of years, Caribbean or Mexico for a week, a domestic ski week or beach week somewhere stylish (Carbon Beach, Nantucket, Sun Valley, 30A). The trip is a Real Event she plans for months. Hotel range $500–1,200/night when on the special trip — Auberge, Pendry, 1 Hotels, Soho House, design boutique hotels, Airbnb villas, the occasional Four Seasons or Borgo Egnazia as a stretch. Not Aman-frequenters. Not Hampton Inn.

She gets her aesthetic cues from Instagram (mom influencers, design-mom accounts, Cup of Jo, Domino), TikTok (#momtok, #vacationoutfits, #toddlermom), Pinterest (vacation outfit boards, "family vacation aesthetic" mood boards), Substack (Cup of Jo, Romper, Big Little Feelings), and occasional Goop / The Cut / Domino.

5.2 The defining anxiety

FROM FOUNDATION

She is the dinner-party host who has it all together and makes it look like no big deal. She wants the trip to LOOK like she does this all the time. The kids in coordinating-but-not-matchy fits. The packed bag that came together "in twenty minutes." The hotel arrival that reads as "oh, we always travel like this." The fear is being visibly trying — visibly stressed, visibly mismatched, visibly the family that brought too much stuff and looks frazzled.

5.3 Jobs to be done

FROM FOUNDATION

  1. "Make the family travel-ready without me sourcing from 6 brands." Pre-curated capsule replaces the Shopbop hunt.
  2. "Help me look pulled-together with my kids in photos." Coordinating tonal palette beats individual outfit-stacking.
  3. "Give me confidence the pieces are travel-functional, not just pretty." Pre-treated / stain-resistant / washable fabric; design that survives gelato.
  4. "Make it look like I didn't try too hard." Invisible-curation is the actual product. Effortless-coded copy and photography reinforce it.
  5. "Not be that family." Distance from Disney / Target / Carter's-coded matching family aesthetic is non-negotiable.

5.4 Market sizing — bottom-up

ASSUMPTION

The top-down TAM exercise (US DTC kids apparel, $X bn; premium travel accessories, $X bn) is the wrong frame for a brand of this size and stage. Bottom-up customer-count math is more honest:

LayerDefinitionEstimated count (US)Notes
TAMUS households with kids under 6 AND household income $150k+~3.5MCensus family-with-young-kids data crossed with HHI distribution
SAMOf those, design-conscious + Shopbop-shoppers + travel-with-kids 1+ times per year~700kConservative ~20% of TAM. Calibrated against Hill House Home / Hatch / Pink Chicken customer bases.
SOM (3-year)Realistic addressable in years 1–3 of brand~10–40k customers1.4–5.7% of SAM. Hill House Home hit ~30k customers in year 3.
Year-1 targetFirst-year buyers1,000–2,500 customers0.14–0.36% of SAM. Achievable via founder-led + Instagram + Pinterest organic.

The math says: if Iverywhere captures 0.5% of its SAM in the first three years, that's 3,500 customers. At a $275 AOV that's ~$960k three-year revenue per customer cohort — sustainable but not a rocketship. The real upside is repeat purchase across the family-lifecycle (Year-1 vest → toddler outgrows → Year-2 vest → second kid → second-kid capsule → Big Trip capsule).

5.5 Where the customer actually lives online

FROM FOUNDATION

ChannelRoleIverywhere lever
InstagramPrimary discovery and aspiration surfaceMid-tier (50–500k follower) aesthetic-mom creator partnerships; organic founder content; UGC at launch
PinterestTrip-planning + outfit-planning surface, months ahead"On The Way" trip-guide pins; vacation outfit boards; "what to pack for X" content
TikTokVertical, casual, GRWM + #momtokUGC + mid-tier creator partnerships; lower priority than IG until year 2
SubstackHighest-trust placement signal for the demoCup of Jo / Romper / Big Little Feelings sponsored slots; smaller reach but deeper conversion
r/blogsnark + r/MommitCultural conversation around the demo, not direct acquisitionListening surface only. No paid ads. Brand authenticity matters more than reach.

Notably not primary channels: Reddit (broadly), Facebook (skews older), traditional press (low signal for this demo), Google Search (low intent at the discovery stage; Pinterest serves this need better).


Section 6 — Competitive Landscape

6.1 No direct competitor — the bet and the risk

FROM FOUNDATION

There is no single brand currently positioning as coordinated, tonal, parent + child, photographable, mid-luxury family travelwear. Hill House Home is closest on adult aesthetic but doesn't have a parent + child coordinated travel line. Pink Chicken / Roller Rabbit own matching but skew matchy and print-heavy. Rylee + Cru / Jamie Kay / Misha & Puff own aspirational kidswear but don't pair with adult lines. Bonpoint and Caramel London sit at the outrageous-luxury tier above the customer's everyday cart. The empty middle is the bet — and the risk (uncategorized brands have to teach the market what they are).

6.2 The comp set — calibrated

FROM FOUNDATION

BrandTierRelevance / Iverywhere positioning move
Hill House HomeDirect comp / aspirational ceilingThe Nap Dress brand. Family-friendly aesthetic luxury. Pottery Barn Kids collab. Owns "effortless put-together mom." Iverywhere sits at this altitude and aesthetic, with the parent + child coordinated capsule as the differentiator (Hill House has no equivalent).
DoênDirect comp (aesthetic)California-vintage soft tones, natural fibers. Aesthetic peer for the brand's intended look. Doên has minimal kidswear — gap Iverywhere fills.
Pink ChickenDirect comp (matching family)Block prints, family matching, bright. More matchy + more print-heavy than Iverywhere should lean. Differentiator: tonal, not printed.
Roller RabbitDirect comp (matching family pajamas)Pima cotton family pajama leader. Iverywhere's eventual pajama SKU lives in this lane with tonal palette as the wedge.
TuckernuckAesthetic peerPreppy luxury for East Coast affluent mom. Coordinating family content but no direct kids line. Marketing tone reference.
SézaneAesthetic peer (Parisian)Parisian effortless aesthetic, vest, linen, soft tones. Photography reference.
Jenni KayneAesthetic peer (West Coast)California lifestyle, soft tones, family-friendly. Marketing photography reference.
HatchAdjacent (maternity → family)The aspirational maternity brand. Many Iverywhere customers were Hatch customers two years ago. Natural pipeline.
Quincy MaeMid-comp (kids)Soft tonal kids basics. Direct kids comp; price point slightly below Iverywhere's intended position.
Misha & PuffAspirational kidsHand-knit luxury kidswear. Same customer overlap; complementary not competitive.
Goldie + AceDirect kids compAustralian aesthetic kidswear, soft tones, family travel-friendly. Adjacent product positioning.
Rylee + CruDirect kids comp (aspirational)Australian aesthetic kidswear — soft tones, natural fibers, very Hill House Home–coded. Price point at or just above Iverywhere kids. Same customer overlap.
Jamie KayDirect kids comp (aspirational)NZ-origin kids aesthetic — neutral palette, family-friendly, photographable. Same customer overlap.
Bonpoint / Caramel LondonAbove the tier — reference onlyOutrageous-luxury international kidswear ($150–400+ per piece). Not where our customer shops day-to-day. Visual ceiling reference, not a comp.
Janessa LeonéAdjacent (premium hats)Premium straw and felt hat brand. Hat reference and potential channel partner.
LululemonAdjacent (premium adult travel-leisure)Athleisure travel-functional. Iverywhere differentiates on aesthetic (hospitality-grade, not gym-coded) and family scope.
Mackage / Aritzia Super PuffAdjacent (near-luxury outerwear)Adult premium puffer / vest comparison. Iverywhere differentiates on Italian fabric + family-coordinated.

6.3 The foils — what Iverywhere is explicitly NOT

FROM FOUNDATION

6.4 The positioning play

FROM FOUNDATION

Iverywhere is the Hill House Home of family travelwear. Accessible luxury, design-led, photographable, kid-friendly, sized parent + child. Doên's palette, Sézane's effortless aesthetic, Roller Rabbit's family-coordinated idea but tonal rather than printed. At a tier where the customer is also buying Hatch maternity, Tuckernuck dresses, Quincy Mae baby basics, and Misha & Puff sweaters.


Section 7 — Brand

7.1 Visual identity

CONFIRMED foundation, palette reconciliation pending

INTERVIEW — reconcile brand / site / fabric / foundation palettes into one canonical system in BRAND_VISUAL_SYSTEM.html

7.2 Brand voice

FROM FOUNDATION

Words to use: easy, throw on, just packed, lived-in, soft, breathable, the one piece, made for the trip, ready, washes well, no fuss, takes a minute, here we go.

Words to avoid: luxurious, premium, elevated, technical, performance, gear, engineered, indestructible. These signal effort — the opposite of the brand promise.

Tone references: Cup of Jo's "Things We're Loving" voice (Joanna Goddard). Hill House Home's lifestyle copy. Doên's product descriptions. Sézane's vacation lookbooks. Direct, observational, never trying too hard. Plainspoken with a slight wink. Knowing without being knowing-at.

Visual references: Jamie Beck (Aix-en-Provence). Joy Bonala (vacation flatlays). Hill House Home lifestyle photography. Doên lookbooks. Cup of Jo "morning at the lake" photo essays.

Source material to mine for codified voice: Haley's vendor emails, "On The Way: Australia 2026" guide, Brand Story – Honeymoon doc. These become the training set for the planned brand-foundation/BRAND_VOICE.html.

7.3 Tagline candidates

ASSUMPTION — three to test

  1. "Travel that looks like no big deal." (Closest to the foundation's defining line. Strong but slightly underwhelming as headline.)
  2. "For families who travel well." (Implies competence without bragging. Aspirational but accessible.)
  3. "Made for the trip." (Functional + emotional. Implies thoughtfulness without buzzwords.)

INTERVIEW — pick one (or write a fourth) before launch site copy is finalized

7.4 Brand narrative arc

ASSUMPTION — launch story

  1. Founders' Sydney trip (March 2026) — the lived proof point. "We packed too much, looked too matchy, came home wanting something that didn't exist."
  2. The capsule idea — pre-curated coordinated set, no matchy, tonal palette, real fabric.
  3. The Italian production story — Olmetex mill in Como, Romi srl sewing, Leïla Dubus prints. Heritage manufacturing tells the craft story without saying "luxury."
  4. The launch — September 1, 2026. The first capsules drop. The first "On The Way" guide publishes alongside.
  5. The customer becomes the protagonist — UGC and influencer partnerships put real families in the brand. The founder voice retreats; the community voice takes over.

7.5 Brand pillars

FROM FOUNDATION

  1. Coordination, not matching. Same fabric, different cuts.
  2. Tonal, not loud. Soft palette, never neon, never characters.
  3. Effortless, not effortful. The product makes the work invisible.
  4. Photographable, not staged. Lived-in, vacation-house morning light, never studio.
  5. Family-aware, not family-themed. Adult-aesthetic kidswear, not kid-aesthetic family-wear.

Section 8 — Product

8.1 Launch SKU set (September 1, 2026)

CONFIRMED — inventory per ledger-claude

SKUStatusQtyVendor
Vests (adult M/W Ivory + Black, Kids Ivory mix)✅ In hand342Romi srl (Italy)
Sunglasses (toddler + infant)✅ In hand1,500Kanghong → Otaaki
Mats (135×135cm PU leather)✅ In hand320Bei Mei Ti
Hats (4 colors, baby/kids/adult)🚚 In transit400Jointop China
Silks (scarves + eye masks)🟡 Late, Romi chasing200Romi srl
Bibs / Aprons🔍 Vendor-shoppingTBD
Blankets🔍 Vendor-shopping (Royal Apparel responded)TBD

8.2 Product principles

FROM FOUNDATION

Every SKU passes the following checks before approval:

8.3 Pricing (per PRICING_STRATEGY v3)

CONFIRMED

SKURetailMarkupGM%
Adult Vest$2201.7×41%
Kids Vest$98 (loss leader)1.2×18%
Travel Mat$782.0×49%
Toddler Sunglasses$352.8×64%
Hat$422.2×56%
Scarf$582.9×66%
Eye Mask$381.9×47%

Headline bundles (the canonical purchase unit):

8.4 Roadmap

ASSUMPTION + INTERVIEW

V1 (Sept 1, 2026): Above SKU set. The launch capsule.

V2 (Spring 2027): Candidates — bag revival, blanket, expanded vest colors, kids sunglasses, sleep set (coordinated parent + child travel pajamas — direct shot at Hill House Home + Roller Rabbit pajama category), lavender sachet S&D extended to a sellable product.

V3 (Holiday 2027): Holiday capsule, gift sets, hospitality co-brand collab (one tier-1 hotel partnership SKU as a test).

V4 (Spring 2028): Resort capsule (swim cover-ups, coordinated swimwear, beach extension), expanded mat colors.

8.5 Quality / craft narrative

CONFIRMED supply chain

The craft story is told without using the word "luxury." Lean on origin (Como, Italy), people (Federico, Giulia, Leïla, Daphne, Joanna), and process (fabric → sewing → trim → finish). Hermès tells time-and-people stories; Iverywhere tells smaller-scale time-and-people stories.

8.6 Surprise & delight

FROM FOUNDATION

Every adult vest order ships with a small luxury gift tucked between the tissue layers. v1 candidates documented in SURPRISE_AND_DELIGHT.html. Hero picks are the linen lavender sachet (sleep nod) + wax-sealed letterpress card (trust signal). Total landed cost ~$5/unit. Reinforces the "more than a transaction" unboxing posture.


Section 9 — Go-to-Market

9.1 Launch sequence (September 1, 2026)

CONFIRMED from STATE_OF_BUSINESS

T-14 weeks → now (May 22): Lock all SKU finalization. Critical path: Olmetex pink fabric (10-week lead, ordered), Romi silks ship date, Federico bag deposit resolution.

T-10 weeks → mid-June: Final lifestyle shoot (Niki Marie Studio booked June 11; Laur Nash creative direction TBD). Klaviyo flows built. Site pages complete (About, Size Guide, FAQ, Shipping/Returns).

T-6 weeks → mid-July: "On The Way: Sydney 2026" published as launch trip guide. Friends-and-family soft launch (10–20 buyers). Influencer seeding to mid-tier creator cohort (named below).

T-2 weeks → mid-Aug: Final inventory at fulfillment. Launch announcement queued.

Sept 1: Password down on Shopify. Email blast, Instagram launch post, Pinterest pins. Day-1 monitoring plan.

9.2 "On The Way" content franchise

ASSUMPTION

9.3 Channel strategy

FROM FOUNDATION

9.4 Launch posture

FROM FOUNDATION

Launch at full price (no discounts). Reward early customers with non-monetary perks: free shipping, signed thank-you note, "On The Way: Sydney" PDF gift-with-purchase, lavender sachet + wax-sealed card surprise-and-delight in the box. Effortless brand can't open with a 20%-off banner — that signals desperation.


Section 10 — Marketing & Customer Acquisition

10.1 Channel priority (foundation-aligned)

FROM FOUNDATION

  1. Instagram — paid creator partnerships with aesthetic-mom influencers (mid-tier, 50k–500k followers). Tier-1 names to target for first launches: Eva Chen (NYC, broad reach), Jess Kirby, Liz Adams, Naomi Davis, Jamie Beck (Aix-en-Provence aesthetic), Joy Bonala, Caitlin Covington, Liz Joy. Mid-tier and authentic family-photography accounts beat mega-influencers for this demo's trust signal.
  2. Pinterest — pin-rich content months ahead of trip-planning seasons (Jan–Mar for spring/summer travel; Aug–Oct for fall/winter). Trip-planning is where the buying intent forms; Pinterest is where it surfaces.
  3. TikTok — UGC and creator partnerships in the #vacationoutfits / #toddlermom / #momtok format. Slightly more casual than IG. Year-2 priority; year-1 lighter weight.
  4. Cup of Jo / Substack family newsletters — placement in "Things We're Loving" or sponsored content slots. Smaller reach but highest trust signal for the exact demo.
  5. Hotel co-marketing — see Section 9.
  6. SEO content / blog — "On The Way" trip guides as owned content channel.
  7. Reddit (secondary, listening-only) — r/blogsnark and r/Mommit community presence. No paid ads; brand authenticity matters more than reach.

10.2 Pre-launch (now → September 1)

Goal: Build an email list of 1,000+ qualified family-travel readers before launch day.

ASSUMPTION — tactic stack

10.3 Launch month (September + 4 weeks)

10.4 Sustained (post-launch, ongoing)

10.5 Retention

FROM FOUNDATION

Iverywhere has structural retention tailwinds: kids outgrow apparel; families take multiple trips per year; coordinating sets create natural upgrade cycles (parent vest in Year 1 → kid vest as toddler grows → second-kid vest when baby arrives → resort capsule for big trip → holiday capsule for the family photo). Bundles drive the first purchase; lifecycle drives the second and third.

10.6 Target metrics (Year 1)

MetricTargetNotes
Email list pre-launch1,000+Foundation for launch-day conversion
Launch month orders150–300 ASSUMPTION15–30% conversion of list at launch is the rough industry signal for premium DTC
Year-1 orders1,000–2,5000.14–0.36% of SAM. Achievable organic-first.
AOV$250–300Driven by bundles (Full Family Launch Kit $495, Coordinated Vest Set $295)
Blended GM%~50%Per pricing v3
CAC<$40Founder-led + organic-first stage
Repeat rate Year 125%+Family lifecycle drives this
Cup of Jo / Substack placements2+Trust-signal anchor placements
Mid-tier influencer partnerships10–15Paid or seeded

Section 11 — Operations & Supply Chain

This section is inherited from BUSINESS_PLAN.html v0 with minimal changes — execution truth doesn't shift with positioning.

11.1 Vendor stack

CONFIRMED in ledger-claude

Production manager / sourcing agent: Joanna McQuaid (Cloth Portico, Naples FL) — coordinates Italian + Chinese production.

Italian path (vests, scarves, eye masks):

Chinese path (hats): Jointop China Industry Co. (Fuzhou) — Daphne Tang. Wires route to FuZhou JunDingWeiYe Imp Exp Co.

Mats: Bei Mei Ti Home Supplies (Shenzhen/Dongguan) — wires to JPMorgan Chase HK A/C 63007914533. Tilltex/Wuxi Tianxiu (Simen Hou) sampled, not production.

Sunglasses: Zhuhai Kanghong Plastic Co. (Théo Berthuit GM, Ludovic Guillaume owner) → Otaaki Inc (US import entity).

Trim hardware (owned moulds — physical brand assets): Rudholm & Haak HK (Kenrick Chiu). Moulds IVEHT25001 (heat-transfer logo), IVEZP25001 (zip pull), IVEPF25001 (snap fastener).

Print design: Leïla Dubus — paid via Pixieset (€870 total).

Compliance: QIMA — PFAS testing partner.

11.2 Critical-path risks (current)

  1. Olmetex mill closes August (Italian summer break) — fabric must be in motion before then.
  2. Pink fabric 10-week lead time as of May 22 → arrives ~July 31; ~4 weeks to sew remaining kids vests.
  3. Romi (Federico) is slipping on silks (scarves, eye masks) — needs hard deadline or accept as post-launch.
  4. Bag deposit recovery — $6,600 sitting with Romi; needs path forward.

11.3 Fulfillment

Today: Wyandotte, MI (Haley's home — garage / spare room). Decision needed before launch: stay home for V1 or move to 3PL? INTERVIEW

11.4 Quality control

11.5 Tooling


Section 12 — Team & Organization

12.1 Founders

RoleDomain
Trevor McCormickCo-founderTech, site, brand-architecture, financials, ops
Haley McCormickCo-founderBrand, production (Italy + China), vendor management, sample QC, photography pipeline, voice

12.2 Extended team (current — contractors / vendors)

12.3 First post-launch hires (12–18 months)

ASSUMPTION + INTERVIEW

12.4 Advisors

INTERVIEW — Female Founder Collective network as advisor pool?


Section 13 — Financials

Detailed costs, supplier ledger, and payment history live in ledger-claude/iverywhere_context.md. This section is the business-plan-level frame.

13.1 Capital deployed to date

CONFIRMED

~$87,000 to suppliers (vests $37K, sunglasses $19K, mats $13K, hats $7.5K, silks deposit $2K, trim moulds, samples). Plus: legal, brand design, photography (€870 to Konstantyn et al.), site development, software subscriptions, sample fees. INTERVIEW — fully loaded capital invested

13.2 Revenue model

13.3 Unit economics (target)

ASSUMPTION — sanity-checked against pricing v3

Per-order target
AOV$275
COGS$137 (50% of AOV)
Gross profit$138
Fulfillment + payment fees~$25
Contribution per order~$113
CAC budget<$40 (organic-first)
CM2 per order~$73

13.4 Inventory financing

Current inventory cost basis: ~$80K (~$87K deployed minus deposits-held-by-Romi). This inventory has to sell through to convert back to working capital.

Sell-through milestones:

13.5 12-month projection (illustrative)

ASSUMPTION — to be replaced with detailed model

QuarterOrdersRevenueGross profitNotes
Q1 (Sept–Nov 2026)350–500$96–138k$48–69kLaunch spike + holiday gifting
Q2 (Dec–Feb 2027)300–450$83–124k$41–62kPost-holiday slow, Pinterest trip-planning ramps
Q3 (Mar–May 2027)400–600$110–165k$55–83kSpring travel buying window
Q4 (Jun–Aug 2027)350–500$96–138k$48–69kSummer travel + V2 launch
Year-1 total1,400–2,050$385–565k$192–283kBootstrapped-feasible range

INTERVIEW — replace this with a true month-over-month model. Tie to ledger-claude actuals as launch begins.

13.6 Funding plan

ASSUMPTION

Bootstrapped to launch. Plan to stay bootstrapped through Year 1 to validate unit economics and avoid premature dilution. Funding decision in Year 2 only if growth requires capital ahead of cash flow (likely scenario: a 2027 raise to fund Year-2 inventory expansion at lower per-unit cost). INTERVIEW — confirm bootstrap-first or set a raise trigger


Section 14 — Milestones & Roadmap

14.1 Pre-launch (now → September 1, 2026)

14.2 Year 1 (September 2026 → September 2027)

14.3 Year 2–3


Section 15 — Risks & Mitigations

15.1 Supply chain risks

RiskLikelihoodImpactMitigation
Olmetex August closure delays kids vestsHighHighPink fabric ordered May 22; backup is launching without kids vests in Pink (or limited Pink SKU)
Federico (Romi) slips silks past JulyMediumMediumTreat scarves + eye masks as post-launch SKUs in V1.5
Bag deposit unrecoverableMediumLowPlan for write-off or convert to credit on next order
Bei Mei Ti reduces qty againLowMediumBuild inventory buffer
Production manager (Joanna) becomes unavailableLowHighINTERVIEW — backup plan?

15.2 Market / brand risks

RiskMitigation
"No one wants this" — category doesn't existPre-launch list size (target 1,000+) validates demand. Soft launch + first 60-day data validates the bet.
Brand-awareness CAC higher than projectedFounder-led content + FFC network as organic engine; influencer-seeded UGC as low-CAC volume play
Hill House Home or Doên enters family-coordinated spaceMove fast on the coordinated-capsule positioning; build moat around content + community + parent + child sizing depth
Pricing too high for target customerPricing v3 calibrated; bundles soften ticket; foundation customer's HHI supports the price
Target customer rejects the "looking effortless" reframe5–10 customer interviews pre-launch validate the framing; foundation explicitly flagged this as a hypothesis to test

15.3 Operational risks

RiskMitigation
Fulfillment from home breaks at scale3PL transition pre-locked at threshold INTERVIEW — set threshold
Founder bandwidth (Haley running production + brand + life)First hire trigger defined INTERVIEW
Inventory financing crunch if launch underperformsINTERVIEW — bridge plan
Product liability (kids SKUs)Insurance gap — needs to be closed before launch

15.4 Personal / family risk

INTERVIEW — being married co-founders has unique upsides and risks; treat explicitly, not implicitly


Section 16 — Appendix

A. Source documents

B. Open decisions tracker

Outstanding decisions from this v1 draft:

  1. Tagline pick (3 candidates in Section 7.3)
  2. Palette reconciliation (brand vs site vs fabric vs foundation expanded — to be done in BRAND_VISUAL_SYSTEM.html)
  3. BRAND_VOICE.html codification (mine from Haley's existing writing)
  4. Bag deposit resolution with Federico
  5. Silks ship date (or move to post-launch as V1.5)
  6. Bibs + blankets vendor commitment
  7. Fulfillment: home vs 3PL (decision threshold)
  8. First hire trigger (ticket volume / order volume)
  9. V2 product roadmap commitment
  10. Funding plan formalization
  11. "On The Way" cadence and distribution channels
  12. Product liability insurance
  13. Trademark status
  14. Joanna McQuaid arrangement formalization
  15. 5–10 target-customer interviews to validate "looking effortless" reframe
  16. First 2 hotel co-marketing pilots — pick properties

C. What changed from v0 → v1


Changelog