
If you’ve ever ordered glasses online, booked a hotel through an app, or grabbed a Reese’s on your way to class, you’ve experienced a massive shift happening in marketing: the reinvention of distribution. Today, companies are rethinking how products move from creation to consumption – and the rules are being rewritten in real time.
Take eyewear brand Warby Parker. By skipping wholesalers and selling directly online, they lowered prices, built a cool, youth-focused brand, and used tech-driven logistics (like home try-on) to replicate the retail experience. That’s direct-to-consumer (DTC) strategy in action with fewer intermediaries, tighter control, more data, and stronger loyalty.
But this isn’t just happening in retail. In travel, AI is reshaping decision-making so quickly that traditional platforms are scrambling. Travelers increasingly ask AI assistants to plan trips, meaning the “middlemen” of booking – search pages, comparison tools, even some Online Travel Agencies – lose influence. Instead, systems match users to hotels automatically. The new competitive advantage? Being machine-readable: clear pricing rules, clean data, and AI-friendly inventory structures.
And then there’s Hershey. Even a 130-year-old candy company is modernizing its supply chain with automation and AI to respond faster, control costs, and expand into high-growth snack categories. Modern logistics is no longer just warehouses, it’s algorithms predicting demand before it even happens.
Across industries, one theme stands out. The companies winning today are those that modernize distribution by cutting out middlemen or by making themselves easy for AI to understand. For marketers, this means understanding not just what consumers want, but how products get to them in an increasingly digital, automated world.
Sources: Hart, Connor (31 March 2026) Hershey’s Growth Strategy Leans Into Salty, Better-for-You Snacks, Wall Street Journal; Tang, Jerry (12 February 2026) When AI starts booking hotels for you, are travel intermediaries at risk? China Travel News; Dublino, Jennifer (19 December 2025), Is Wholesale Over? The Death of the Middleman, Business.com.
Discussion Questions and Activities
- Where do you personally notice middlemen being replaced or minimized in your daily purchases?
- What risks do companies face when shifting to a Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) model?
- How does AI’s growing role in decision-making change marketing strategy?
- Why would a company like Hershey invest heavily in supply-chain modernization?
- Should companies be worried that AI, not consumers, may soon make many purchasing decisions? If yes, which types of companies and why?
- AI Booking Experiment (Online Research Activity): Use an AI travel-planning tool such as Expedia’s AI assistant https://www.expedia.com/lp/beta/ai to plan a short weekend trip. Compare the AI-generated plan to what you would have chosen manually. What changed and why?
- Supply Chain Detective: Choose a product you regularly buy and map its distribution channel. Identify any intermediaries and imagine one change that could simplify the chain.
- DTC vs. Middleman Debate: In small groups, argue whether a startup should launch using a traditional retail model or a DTC model. Present your case.




