International expansion is often misunderstood. It’s not about shipping products, signing distributors, and tracking sales from afar.
It’s about presence. A recent trip to Tokyo reinforced that reality.
The Gap Between Distribution and Activation
The objective of the visit was simple: understand why TOSSIT wasn’t performing at its expected level in Japan.
The answer was even simpler.
The product was there, but the activation wasn’t.
- No live demonstrations
- No hands-on experience
- No immediate understanding for the customer
In many stores, products were placed behind glass. Protected, but untouchable.
That’s a problem.
TOSSIT is not a product you explain. It’s a product you experience.
If a store employee cannot explain it in 10 seconds — or better, put it directly in someone’s hands — the sale is already lost.
Old Distribution Models Don’t Work Anymore
For decades, distribution followed a predictable pattern:
Ship → Place on shelf → Wait
That model is no longer viable.
Today, attention is scarce. Engagement is everything.
Without demonstration, without energy, without presence: products remain invisible.
And invisible products don’t sell.
What Actually Drives Growth
Across every successful TOSSIT market, the pattern is consistent:
- France built the foundation through constant presence
- Poland drives volume through fairs and live demonstrations
- Greece accelerates growth with local activations
- Germany and the UK combine retail and on-the-ground visibility
The common denominator is not strategy decks or forecasts. It’s execution.
Demos. Events. Retail training. Street content.
Real-world interaction.
What It Takes to Fix a Market
Improving performance in a market requires more than analysis.
It requires immersion.
During the visit to Tokyo:
- Store managers were met directly
- Local retail realities were observed firsthand
- Content was created in the streets
- Gaps were identified and addressed in real time
This process is not efficient on paper.
It involves friction:
- Cultural differences
- Operational constraints
- Local habits that don’t align with the brand’s approach
But this is where progress happens. Not in theory — in practice.
The Reality of International Expansion
Expanding internationally means stepping into each market fully.
- Sitting with partners
- Challenging existing methods
- Adapting without losing direction
- Being willing to push, even when it’s uncomfortable
Because alignment does not happen automatically. It is built.
And sometimes imposed.
A Simple Principle
You cannot fix a market remotely. You cannot build demand from a spreadsheet. You cannot create momentum without presence.
If you want a product to succeed, you have to step into the market — completely.
That means time. That means effort. That means being there.
Looking Ahead
Japan is a high-potential market. The fundamentals are there. The opportunity is clear.
Now, it’s about activation.
And as with every market before, the approach remains the same:
Show up. Execute. Build.
Because in the end, markets don’t grow from plans.
They grow from action.



