How Wilson's Expanded Into 300+ Stores With DALA

Wilson's Juice Company had strong products and real consumer demand. What they needed was the operating infrastructure to reach more stores without chaos. This is what happened.

8 min read
How Wilson's Expanded Into 300+ Stores With DALA – DALA Nigerian retail and FMCG insight
Editorial photography for DALA's Nigerian retail execution and FMCG insight series.

The situation: strong product, limited reach

Wilson's Juice Company makes high-quality beverages that consumers actively seek out. Before partnering with DALA, the brand was selling through a limited set of stores in Lagos, relationships built one by one through direct sales efforts. Consumer feedback was positive. The product had real market pull. But the infrastructure to scale that pull into a broader store network simply wasn't there.

The team was managing deliveries, invoicing, store relationships, and collections themselves, a model that works at small scale and breaks down as ambition grows. Adding ten new stores meant ten new delivery routes, ten new buyer relationships, ten new sets of documentation requirements, and ten new payment cycles to track. The business was growing but the operational complexity was growing faster.

The challenge: building retail infrastructure without building a team

The conventional path for a brand wanting to expand its store network in Nigeria is to hire a sales team. Sales executives, merchandisers, delivery drivers, a collections team, an administrator for documentation. This model works, it's how the large FMCG companies operate. But for a growing brand like Wilson's, the capital requirement and management overhead of building that team was a constraint.

Hiring ahead of the revenue is risky. Hiring behind the revenue means operational chaos during the growth period. The brand needed a third option: access to retail infrastructure that already existed, with the accountability and reporting that comes from a structured partner rather than a contractor.

How Wilson's Expanded Into 300+ Stores With DALA – in-store retail execution visual
Field conditions in Nigerian retail: what FMCG execution looks like on the ground.

What DALA brought to the partnership

DALA's role in the Wilson's partnership was to serve as the operational execution layer between the brand and its retail network. Specifically, DALA brought four things that the brand could not easily build alone.

First, an existing store network. DALA already had active relationships with more than 300 stores across Lagos and Ogun State, relationships built on operational trust, not just sales conversations. Getting Wilson's products into these stores meant leveraging relationships that took years to build, not starting from zero.

Second, a field team that manages shelves, not just deliveries. DALA's field representatives conduct regular store checks, confirm product placement, monitor stock levels, and flag issues before they become stockouts. The brand receives this field intelligence as part of the partnership.

Third, a documentation and payment structure that protects the brand's cash flow. Every delivery through DALA follows a documented process: matched purchase orders, signed confirmations, and a 30-day payment cycle that the brand can plan around.

Fourth, weekly reporting that shows exactly what is selling where, by store, by SKU, by volume, so the brand's leadership team has visibility into their retail performance without visiting every location.

The expansion: from dozens of stores to 300+

The growth did not happen overnight, and that is intentional. Scaling a retail distribution network too quickly, before the operational model is proven, creates the same stockout and quality problems that derail many brand expansions.

DALA and Wilson's began with a core group of high-potential stores where the product velocity justified priority attention. The execution model was built and verified, delivery schedules, documentation processes, shelf management standards, and reporting cadences, before additional stores were added.

As the model proved reliable, the network grew. Each new store was onboarded with the same operational standards that applied to the first. By the time the network reached 300+ stores across Lagos and Ogun State, Wilson's was generating more than ₦30 million in tracked retail revenue, not from a sudden push, but from a methodical build of operational discipline.

Read the full Wilson's case study for more detail on the outcomes.

What the numbers mean in practice

300+ stores is a meaningful number in Lagos and Ogun State retail. It represents coverage across major modern trade chains and a significant portion of the neighbourhood supermarket market, the stores that serve the daily shopping needs of urban consumers rather than the destination shopping trips to large format stores.

For Wilson's, 300 active retail locations means their product is reachable by a substantial portion of their target consumer base through everyday shopping. It means that a brand campaign or social media push can convert to actual purchase because the product is on a shelf near where the consumer already shops. Distribution depth of this kind creates a commercial foundation that brand building alone cannot create.

₦30M+ in tracked revenue represents what structured execution produces when an operational model works properly. It is not a headline number, it is the result of 300 consistent delivery cycles, maintained shelf positions, accurate documentation, and resolved payment cycles across more than a year of retail operations.

How Wilson's Expanded Into 300+ Stores With DALA – brand and supermarket distribution visual
Distribution and shelf execution across Nigerian modern trade locations.

The lesson for other brands

Wilson's experience is not unique. It reflects a pattern that plays out for growing FMCG brands across Nigeria: strong products with real consumer demand, constrained by the operational infrastructure required to reach the scale of distribution that matches the product's potential.

The lesson is that distribution infrastructure is a capability, not just a service. Building it in-house takes time, capital, and management focus that a growing brand may not have in surplus. Partnering with an organisation that has already built it, and that has the store relationships, field teams, and operational systems to deploy it immediately, changes the timeline from years to months.

If you are ready to grow your retail presence, the conversation starts with your brand's current position: what products, what current distribution, what production capacity, and what growth ambition. DALA's team can assess the fit and outline what a partnership would look like in practice.

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