The brands you carry have marketing budgets allocated specifically to support the retailers who sell their product. This is not a secret program or a special deal reserved for large accounts. It is a standard structure in wholesale retail called vendor co-op, and it exists at virtually every major footwear and apparel brand in the run specialty channel.
The funds are real. The programs are active. And the majority of independent run specialty stores leave them completely untouched every year.
Not because the money is hard to access. Because the conversation never gets started, or when it does, it is not structured in a way that results in an approved program. This post explains what co-op is, why most stores do not access it, what a successful pitch actually requires, and what the money can fund once you have it.
What Vendor Co-Op Marketing Actually Is
Vendor co-op is a marketing cost-sharing arrangement between a brand and a retailer. The brand contributes funds toward marketing campaigns that feature their product at the retail level. The retailer runs the campaign, reaches their local audience, and reports results back to the brand.
From the brand's perspective, co-op is a way to extend their marketing reach into local markets they cannot efficiently target through national campaigns. A paid social campaign running at your store reaches customers in your specific market who are already predisposed to trust your recommendation. That conversion quality is fundamentally different from a national brand awareness campaign.
From your perspective, co-op is additional marketing budget at little or no additional cost to the store. A well-structured co-op program can effectively double or triple your available marketing spend for campaigns featuring that brand's product, which in turn drives sell-through data that makes the next pitch easier to approve.
Why Most Stores Never Access It
There are three patterns that explain why co-op funds go unclaimed at most independent stores.
They do not know it exists. Co-op programs are not always proactively offered by brand reps. If a rep has not mentioned it, that does not mean the program does not exist. In many cases reps are waiting for the retailer to initiate the conversation. The absence of an offer is not the absence of a program.
The ask is not structured correctly. A casual conversation with a brand rep asking for marketing support rarely produces results. Co-op budget approvals go through a brand's marketing department, not through the sales rep. Getting an approval requires a formal proposal with specific campaign details, channel strategy, projected reach, and a reporting framework. An informal ask cannot navigate that process regardless of how good the relationship is.
There is no follow-through infrastructure. Even stores that receive initial brand interest often let it stall because executing the campaign, tracking the results, and delivering a performance report to the brand is a meaningful operational lift on top of running a store. Co-op programs compound when you deliver on them. They disappear when the reporting never arrives.
What a Successful Co-Op Pitch Requires
A pitch that gets approved is a business case, not a request. It answers four questions that the brand's marketing team needs to say yes.
What Co-Op Funds Can Actually Cover
The scope of what co-op programs fund is broader than most store owners assume. The specific eligibility varies by brand and program, but the following uses are commonly covered.
- Paid social campaigns: Meta, Instagram, and TikTok campaigns featuring the brand's product with store-level targeting. The brand funds the media spend. You run the campaign and own the audience data.
- Google Ads: Local search campaigns and brand-specific campaigns. Co-op can fund both the media spend and the campaign management costs in many programs.
- Geo-fenced display advertising: Display campaigns targeting high-intent locations with in-store visit attribution. One of the most compelling uses because the brand can see when their investment moved someone through your door.
- In-store event production: Demo nights, product launch events, and vendor rep appearances featuring the brand's product. This is a particularly natural co-op use because the brand benefits from the event directly and can often supply additional materials and support.
- Email campaigns: Brand-specific sends to your subscriber list. With a 20 to 25 percent run specialty open rate, your email list is a meaningful media asset that brands value.
- Content production: Photography and video featuring the brand's product. Content that lives on your channels and potentially the brand's channels. A genuine win for both parties.
The Event Connection
Demo nights are one of the most natural co-op uses in run specialty. The brand supplies product and often a rep. The store supplies the community and the venue. Co-op funds cover the promotion campaign that fills the room and the post-event email that converts attendees. The brand gets product in the hands of in-market buyers. The store gets a funded marketing moment that a standard email campaign cannot replicate.
The post-event performance report is particularly valuable in this context because the brand can see a direct line from co-op investment to product trial to purchase. That data makes the case for the next event's funding and typically results in larger commitments over time. More on how demo night activations work in the Event Activations overview.
The DTC Threat Context
It is worth understanding why brands are motivated to fund co-op programs now more than at any previous point. Every major footwear brand has invested significantly in direct-to-consumer channels in the last several years. DTC is their highest-margin channel. The long-term implication for independent retailers is real: if customers build loyalty to the brand rather than to the store, they increasingly buy direct.
The counterargument brands hear from run specialty is the one you should be making explicitly in your co-op pitch. Run specialty is where customers are educated about product, fitted correctly, and converted to brand loyalists at a rate that no DTC website can match. Your store produces customers who buy that brand for years. That is the value proposition your co-op pitch needs to articulate. The brand needs you as much as you benefit from their funding, and a well-framed pitch makes that dynamic explicit. More on the broader brand relationship strategy is covered in the Brand Partnerships service overview.
The first step is the simplest one: Before building a pitch, pull your sell-through data for each brand you carry for the last 12 months. That data is the foundation of every co-op conversation and most stores have never looked at it through the lens of what it could unlock.