Elf's CEO joins TikTok Live sessions where he is directly lobbied by the community for new products. He uses this "zero distance" feedback to bypass traditional R&D, personally pushing his innovation team to fast-track product development from 18 months down to six.
Elf Beauty CEO Tarang Amin practices a "zero distance" policy by engaging directly with customers on TikTok Live. After being "terrorized" by user requests for a new product, he overruled an 18-month timeline and launched it in just six months, showing how direct community feedback can radically accelerate a product pipeline.
Don't wait for large corporate campaigns to get audience feedback. Marketers should be "religiously" creating content on their personal social channels to micro-test messaging, language, and program ideas. This provides a direct, rapid feedback loop on what the audience actually cares about, enabling content-led innovation.
The "candy salad," a consumer-driven trend on TikTok to combat candy inflation, was quickly adopted and productized by Ferrara (owner of Nutella) with a dedicated kit. This shows how major CPG brands now monitor social platforms to rapidly identify and capitalize on organic consumer behavior.
Instead of costly research and focus groups (R&D), brands like Olipop and Poppy are using "Scrolling & Development" (S&D). They monitor social media for viral trends, like the Shirley Temple's resurgence, and quickly launch their own versions, reducing risk and accelerating time-to-market.
Harvey's CEO found his product decisions were worse when he isolated himself to work on strategy. He realized his best product insights come from being deeply involved in sales calls 24/7. The direct feedback loop from talking to customers is more valuable for roadmap planning than any internal brainstorming session.
Glucose Goddess founder Jessie InchauspƩ treats her Instagram posts like a tech product, using audience comments and DMs as direct user research. This iterative process of listening to and adapting based on feedback, even when negative, is key to refining a message for mass appeal.
Elf's CEO asserts the company is in the "entertainment industry," not beauty. This mindset shifts their marketing focus from selling products to delighting their community. It justifies tactics like a Twitch channel or airdropping care packages, which build brand love over direct ROI.
Rainbird live-streamed customer focus groups back to its engineering team. This allowed engineers to hear feedback directly, eliminating skepticism and creating immediate alignment on necessary design changes without requiring them to travel.
Elf's CEO hosts product review meetings every two weeks that are open to all employees, regardless of role. He actively monitors the meeting's chat for feedback, believing the best ideas can come from anyone, like an inventory planner with a contrarian view on a new product.
Shelter Skin's founder uses her personal Instagram following as a real-time focus group. By posting polls about packaging and product details, she gets immediate data from her ideal customers, eliminating the cost and time of traditional market research and fostering community co-creation.