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Joey Thomas from Dude Wipes:

The Brand That Turned Poop Jokes Into a $308M Business

Joey Thomas

VP

Company

Dude Wipes

Location

Dallas, Texas, United States

Bio

I build brands that dominate categories. At DUDE Wipes, I led growth from retail disruptor to category leader by owning the digital shelf, scaling Amazon, growing into club, and turning TikTok Shop into a seven-figure channel without paid ads. Before DUDE, I cut my teeth at 3M and BIC, learning how the best in the world build, launch, and scale products. I went on to help scale and sell Wild Planet Foods, a delicious, wildly premium, mission based tuna brand that proved values driven CPGs can win big without compromising on quality. My edge is bringing sales and marketing together as one growth engine. I combine big company discipline with challenger-brand scrappiness to move fast, think bigger, and create the kind of demand retail can’t ignore.

I build brands that dominate categories....

description

DUDE Wipes went from a spare bedroom in our apartment, to getting a Shark Tank deal with Mark Cuban, to being the first start up ever to disrupt toilet paper aisles nationwide.

DUDE Wipes went from a spare...

Actionable Takeaways

TikTok Shop is Amazon 2012:

The brands that built ecomm flywheels early on Amazon dominated for years. TikTok Shop has the same trajectory: $18 billion in US sales in 2024, $30 billion projected for 2026. Average user is 37, opens the app 22 times a day, spends 96 minutes fully engaged with sound on. Creator army model — affiliates with 5,000+ followers earning commission — is the winning playbook for consumable products.

Stocking stuffers as trial engine:

November and December are Dude Wipes’ biggest months because the product fits perfectly in a Christmas stocking. Women buy it for the men in their lives. One pack delivers 60%+ repurchase rate. The stocking stuffer isn’t just a seasonal spike — it’s a deliberately designed trial mechanism that seeds January through March retention.

You can sell a black razor to anyone, but a pink razor only to women:

Joey learned this principle at Bic: market with a male voice and you reach the whole household, because women are not intimidated to buy a male-branded product, but men won’t buy a female-branded one. In most households, women are the primary purchasers. Dude Wipes markets to guys and captures 40% female buyers. That’s by design.

Don’t restrict creators. Volume beats perfection:

TikTok will tell you to put out 20 bad videos rather than 2 polished ones. Big CPG brands are paralyzed by messaging control. Dude Wipes empowers creators to say what they want. The product speaks for itself. The consumer is far less obsessed with your brand than you think — they’re exposed to the video, realize dry toilet paper is gross, and buy.

Reddit seeding for AI-driven shopping:

ChatGPT reportedly draws heavily from Reddit when answering product questions. If that’s true, flooding Reddit with authentic brand information now could mean owning AI shopping recommendations later. Joey is exploring this through a service called Nectar. Early brands in AI’s knowledge base will have a structural advantage as shopping shifts to conversational AI.

Bring creative in-house and go live on TikTok Shop:

The biggest 2026 unlocks: own the creative voice internally rather than outsourcing it, and build an in-house team that’s going live on TikTok Shop daily. Live shopping is the future. Dude Wipes has enough personality to thrive in a live format. The Costco rollout will be the single biggest door impact from a sales perspective.

Conversation Highlights

Three roommates in Chicago started using baby wipes as toilet paper in 2011, decided to sell their own, and ended up building one of the fastest-growing CPG brands in America. Joey Thomas joined as VP in late 2021 when Dude Wipes revenue was sub-$60 million — by 2025 the company had hit $308 million, almost entirely bootstrapped. In this episode, Joey breaks down the specific moves behind that trajectory: why TikTok Shop is the biggest channel unlock of the last 18 months, how the stocking stuffer strategy turns November and December into the brand’s highest-volume months, the Bic razor principle behind their male-voiced but whole-household strategy, and why the brands that figure out Reddit seeding for AI-driven shopping now will own the next decade.

Topics Discussed

  • The founding story: three Chicago roommates, a bad diet, baby wipes, and the insight that launched a $300M brand
  • How Dude Wipes grew from sub-$60M to $308M in four years, bootstrapped without VC funding
  • Why November and December are the biggest sales months — the stocking stuffer strategy and 60%+ trial-to-repurchase rate
  • Demographics: 60% male buyers, 40% female — and the Bic razor principle behind male-voiced marketing that reaches the whole household
  • TikTok Shop: the mechanics of a creator army (5K+ followers, commission-based), why average TikTok user is 37, and why this is Amazon 2012
  • Don’t restrict creators: why big CPG’s obsession with message control is the thing holding them back
  • AI at Dude Wipes: data analysis, DM bot outreach for creator recruitment, and Reddit seeding for AI shopping recommendations
  • Brand personality: why being the loudest flushable wipes brand on the internet is a structural advantage that Kimberly-Clark can’t copy
  • Upcoming: Costco rollout, bringing creative fully in-house, building a live TikTok Shop team
  • Sports partnerships: Cleveland Browns, UEFA soccer teams — and why most teams aren’t excited about a butt wipe on their shirt
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