Omnichannel Project

Omnichannel Project

Channel by channel operating profit, named and optimised.

Omnichannel Project

Channel-by-channel operating profit,
named and optimised.

A six to eight week financial and commercial assessment that rebuilds your P&L by channel, surfaces the real direct contribution per route to market, and prescribes the channel optimisation moves that compound operating profit. Built from twenty years inside CHANEL, including the ten-person team that defined the future of distribution.

From $10,000Scope, data depth, and strategy implementation shape the final fee6 to 8 weeks typical
Channels analysed
8+
Sectors covered
5
Project duration
6 to 8w
Format
Live
Where this starts

Do you have a north star?

If you do, this project plugs your channel economics into it. If you do not, this project starts by helping you build one. Both are valid starting points.

Most founders run a competent multi-channel business without ever pausing to ask whether the channel mix is actually serving the strategic objective. The marketing team prioritises wholesale because the relationships are warm. The retail team defends boutique numbers because of overhead allocations they did not design. The e-commerce team chases growth without knowing the contribution per order. None of those conversations resolve until the channel P&L is rebuilt and the north star is named.

This work surfaces that gap and closes it.

The deliverable

Four artefacts, built to be installed.

01

Historical P&L by channel

Channel-by-channel reconstruction of the last 12 to 36 months showing real direct contribution by route to market. Shared costs allocated against the right drivers. Surfaces what each channel actually earns at the operating line, not the gross margin.

02

Channel mechanics map

For each active channel, the levers that move operating profit, the friction points, and the strategic role of that channel in your overall mix. Includes a client data ownership audit, because unless you control the data the relationship is not yours.

03

Forward forecast by channel

A 12 to 24 month forecast that ties channel growth to strategic priority and operating profit targets. Not a sales model, an OP-anchored plan. Each channel forecasted against its own contribution profile, not a top-down growth assumption.

04

Strategic objectives

The named decisions you walk away with. Which channels to grow, which to optimise, which to wind down, and the sequence that delivers maximum OP impact across 24 months. Each objective tied to the north star.

Methodology

Six steps. Roughly six weeks. Tightly led.

Step 01

North star check

Is there a defined strategic north star? If yes, we work from it. If no, we build one. Without a north star the channel mix optimisation has nothing to optimise toward.

Step 02

P&L reconstruction

Historical channel P&Ls rebuilt from raw sales, COGS, and direct-cost data. Shared costs allocated to the right channels rather than spread evenly.

Step 03

Contribution analysis

What does each channel actually contribute at the operating line? Where does volume mask thin margin? Where does premium pricing carry the whole P&L?

Step 04

Client data audit

Who owns the client data? Brand or retailer? This determines whether the relationship is actually yours. Most brands underestimate how exposed they are.

Step 05

Sales generation strategy

Where does the next dollar of revenue actually come from? Which channel responds to which lever? We name the activation sequence, not just the targets.

Step 06

Forward plan and objectives

The 12 to 24 month forecast by channel, tied to the named strategic objectives. The plan you run against, not the deck you store.

Channels covered

Eight distinct channel types, each with different economics.

Every channel has a different cost structure, contribution profile, and strategic role. This work treats them separately rather than rolling them into a single sales number.

Standalone boutique

Own retail with full rent, rates, staff, fit-out. High customer relationship value, heavy P&L burden in markets with expensive leases.

Concession (department store)

Inside a host retailer. Lower fit-out, shared footfall, complex margin and overhead splits negotiated case by case.

E-retail owned (DTC)

Direct e-commerce on your own platform. Highest data ownership, full responsibility for acquisition, delivery, and returns.

E-retail third-party

Pureplayers and marketplaces. Selective distribution rules and retailer-controlled margin mechanics shape the contribution.

E-wholesale

Selling stock to online retailers. Same wholesale economics, different relationship cadence and merchandising rights.

Wholesale, traditional

The classic department store and specialist channel. Heavy A&P contribution typically required to drive sell-through.

Owned retail, multi-format

Mixed-format own retail beyond standalone boutiques. Different unit economics per format, often blended into one line.

Travel retail

Airports, ferry terminals, cruise. Discrete economics, separate planning cycle, distinct client, often the strongest contribution line in the mix.

Sectors

Beauty first. Mechanics translate.

The channel structure was developed inside CHANEL’s beauty business, where the omnichannel question is most acute. The mechanics translate directly to:

+Beauty, prestige and mass, local market and travel retail
+CPG beyond beauty (food, drink, lifestyle, accessories)
+Fashion across price tiers
+Watches and Fine Jewellery, Hospitality, Tech
+E-commerce native brands expanding into physical
Cinematic backdrop on the Omnichannel page
Channel Architecture

The question is not which channels you can sell through. It is which channels you should refuse. A brand reveals itself in the doors it walks past.

Geographies

Lead markets and discovery markets.

We are direct about where the depth sits. Lead markets are where twenty years of operating context applies fully. Discovery markets are where we work at a preferential rate, in active dialog, while we build the local nuance together. Both produce the same artefacts.

Discovery markets, preferential rate

Where we work in dialog

  • Asia (HK, SG, ID, MY, TH, JP, KR)
  • Australia and New Zealand
  • Middle East (UAE, KSA, KW)
Why this exists

Twenty years inside CHANEL, including the ten-person team that defined the future of distribution.

Most fractional CFOs read your P&L from the top down. Revenue, gross margin, marketing, structure, operating profit. That works for a single-channel business. For an omnichannel business it hides where the operating profit actually lives.

Inside CHANEL UK I ran a $280m commercial P&L across nearly 700 stores, e-retail, standalone boutiques, and the wholesale relationships with Harrods, Selfridges, Boots, John Lewis. I sat inside the ten-person internal team CHANEL convened to define the future of distribution for the brand. The work was channel-by-channel reconstruction, the same work this project delivers for founder businesses.

The reason this work is rare in the fractional CFO market is that very few advisors have actually run a P&L this complicated, with this much channel interplay, at this scale. That is the gap this project fills.

David Warwick. Former CHANEL Commercial Director UK. Former Regional CFO for a $1.1bn region across seven countries from Latin America to UK and South Africa. CIMA qualified, ADIT December 2026. Global clients.

Questions founders ask

Before you commit.

Is this just for beauty brands?
No. The mechanics translate directly to CPG, fashion, watches and fine jewellery, and e-commerce native brands. The omnichannel question, which channels carry the operating profit, which dilute it, which are strategically necessary even when dilutive, applies wherever you sell through more than one route. Beauty is where the methodology was developed and tested most rigorously, but the project is sector-translatable.
We are not a luxury brand. Does this still apply?
Yes. Premium and luxury channel economics get the same scrutiny, but mass and mid-tier brands often need this work more, because volume hides margin damage that premium pricing masks. The methodology is the same; the thresholds and the strategic conclusions shift.
How does this differ from a fractional CFO engagement?
A fractional CFO engagement is ongoing, broad, and shaped to whatever the founder needs week to week. This project is finite, focused, and ends with a named deliverable: four artefacts and a strategic objectives plan. Many founders use this project as a structured starting point and then engage on a retainer once it concludes, but the project stands alone.
Do we need a north star already?
No. If you have one we plug the channel economics into it. If you do not, building one is step 1 of the work. Many founders run a competent multi-channel business without ever defining the strategic objective the mix is meant to serve. We surface and close that gap.
What data do we need to share?
Historical P&L by channel, ideally trailing 24 to 36 months. Channel sales mix and gross margin by SKU or category. A view of your client data architecture (who owns what, where it sits, what you can access). The discovery exchange identifies any gaps and we work around them where the data is incomplete.
How is the project structured?
Week 1: discovery dialog and data exchange. Weeks 2 to 4: reconstruction and analysis, run asynchronously with two working calls per week. Weeks 5 to 6: forward forecast and strategic objectives. Weeks 7 to 8 if needed: refinement and final delivery. Every project ends with a live working session to walk through the deliverable and confirm the install path.
Can you run this in markets where you do not have local depth?
Yes, in discovery mode. For Asia, Australia and New Zealand, and the Middle East we work at a preferential rate because the local nuance is built in dialog with the founder. The financial mechanics are universal; the local market patterns are what we build together. We are direct about which is which.
How many of these projects do you run at once?
A small number. The work is delivered personally and the analysis is bespoke each time, so concurrent engagements are deliberately limited. If you submit the discovery exchange and the project is right for your business, we agree a start date that respects current commitments.
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