The Glow
Report.
The publication on growing modern consumer brands. Essays, field notes, and teardowns from inside real engagements. Read by the founders, operators, and investors building what's next — and written by people who still have P&L on the line.
Currently Vol. IV — The Compounding BrandThe compounding brand. Why most consumer businesses plateau at $40M, and how the ones that don't get built.
Every consumer founder we work with has two plateaus. The first is $8M, which is a distribution problem. The second is $40M, which is a brand problem — and it is almost always the harder one to fix. This is the essay we wanted to read in 2019.
The pieces in Vol. IV.
The category is the first asset you build.
The range review is decided six months before you walk in.
Why fifty creators will beat five thousand posts.
The CAC curve that should be making your board nervous.
"We killed the line that made us" — a conversation with the team behind Halcyon.
A launch week checklist, stolen from ten brands that didn't stock out.
"The only brand publication I read that doesn't feel written by people trying to sell me a workshop."
"Three decisions in our last board cycle traced directly to a Glow Report piece. Cheapest consulting we have ever done."
"I forward every issue to our founders. It is the shared language we didn't have for this category."
Every volume, every piece.
Full archiveWritten from the work, not about it.
The Glow Report is Glow Group's publication. Everything in it is written by the people actually running engagements — our directors, editors, and contributing operators. We commission external contributors too, but only from people who have sat inside a P&L.
Our editorial principle is simple: nothing enters the Report that we haven't personally seen work or seen fail. No round-up posts. No thought leadership. No agency marketing dressed as an essay.
The Report is free. It will always be free. We make our money on the consulting work; the publication exists because the category doesn't have a serious publication, and building one is the fastest way to build trust with the kind of founders we want to work with. If it becomes commercially self-sustaining through sponsorship or paid archives, we will tell you — not change the terms quietly.