Daily Camera (Boulder)

Sunday gets deal with Walmart,

- By Dan Mika

Sunday, a startup that aims to provide geographic­ally customized lawn care materials, will star t selling its goods at hundreds of Walmart Inc. (NYSE: WAL) locations across the country beginning Tuesday.

The company, registered as This Land Inc., will begin displaying its line of fertilizer­s and lowpestici­de weed killers at 700 stores across the continenta­l U.S, amounting to nearly 15% of the retail giant’s American footprint.

In an interview with Bizwest, Sunday CEO Coulter Lewis said the star tup had been in talks with the world’s largest retailer since the middle of last year, well before the company closed out its $19 million Series B.

Sunday’s original business model is in its subscripti­on box. Customers would order a soil sampling kit and send it to a laboratory, which would combine data from that sample and available climate data for the area to determine which of Sunday’s products is best for that specific lawn. The customer would then get those products in a monthly deliver y.

While that service isn’t going away with the Walmar t launch, inperson customers won’t have access to those soil tests. Instead, the company is sending products that fit the soil and climate that are likely to match the conditions in that store’s state.

That change in delivery is in response to how customers have traditiona­lly bought lawn care products.

Lewis said the vast majority of customers are going into stores to buy the products when they need them, so placing Sunday’s products on dedicated store shelves would reach a population of homeowners that wouldn’t normally turn to e-commerce for lawn care.

“The reality is this is not a categor y typically bought online, or at all,” he said. “In a lot of ways, it’s kind of 30 years behind the times.”

He also said the expansion into physical retail is part of Sunday’s aspiration­s to wean lawns in the U.S. off synthetic inputs. The company builds its formulatio­ns with nutrient-dense ingredient­s derived from naturally-occurring materials.

With Walmart’s reach, Lewis thinks it’ll be easier for homeowners to adopt that within their maintenanc­e routine while targeting an industry estimated to be worth about $50 billion annually.

“It’s really about showing that the brand has the ability to succeed in that market,” he said.

Lewis wouldn’t specify the expected revenue or customer gains from the distributi­on deal, but said the company is estimating a doubling of its revenue growth this year after its revenue grew by 800% from 2019 to 2020.

Sunday currently employs 45 people.

 ??  ??
 ?? Cliff Grassmick / Staff Photograph­er ?? Trent Lewis, left, and his brother Coulter have produced a non toxic lawn care product that's marketed directly to consumers.
Cliff Grassmick / Staff Photograph­er Trent Lewis, left, and his brother Coulter have produced a non toxic lawn care product that's marketed directly to consumers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States