The meat snack category is traditionally masculine. Chomps followed suit until data revealed their "healthy achiever" customer was predominantly female. This insight prompted a total rebrand, shifting from a generic "cow brand" logo to a more fun, approachable identity that resonated and unlocked growth.

Related Insights

To truly change a brand's narrative, marketing's 'talking the talk' is insufficient. The product experience itself must embody the desired story. This 'walking the walk' through the product is the most powerful way to shape core brand perception and make the narrative shareable.

Don't try to force customers to adopt new behaviors, like a boot-buyer purchasing sandals. Instead, focus on encouraging them to buy a second pair, a newer model, or an upgraded version of the product they already love. This audience-focused approach builds on existing loyalty and is far more effective.

Square strategically shifted its core customer definition from the generic 'small business' to the more specific 'local business.' This subtle change allows the brand to anchor its identity in the community fabric its customers create, moving beyond simple company size to a shared ethos.

A dual-brand strategy (e.g., Hims & Hers) creates deep emotional resonance by speaking to distinct audiences on personal journeys. This is more than a simple filter; it's executed efficiently via a componentized codebase, allowing for tailored experiences without halting product velocity.

Instead of creating a vague "ideal client avatar," identify a real person who embodies your brand's values. For Birdies, this was Meghan Markle—before her royal fame—because she represented warmth, hosting, and community. This makes marketing and product decisions tangible and focused.

Bizzabo created a campaign personifying the frustrations of its main competitor's customers. By directly addressing specific pain points heard in sales calls, the campaign resonated deeply with prospects and highlighted Bizzabo's superior solutions in a memorable, targeted way.

Instead of manually sifting through overwhelming survey responses, input the raw data into an AI model. You can prompt it to identify distinct customer segments and generate detailed avatars—complete with pain points and desires—for each of your specific offers.

Brands miss opportunities by testing product, packaging, and advertising in silos. Connecting these data sources creates a powerful feedback loop. For example, a consumer insight about desirable packaging can be directly incorporated into an ad campaign, but only if the data is unified.

An insight that men bought carpets based on durability was wrong. Women were the primary buyers, and their top criterion was color. By redesigning the retail space to emulate a makeup counter—with softer lighting, curves, and lifestyle imagery—sales skyrocketed 350% in six weeks.

LoveSack operated successfully for years based on product instinct alone. However, transformational growth occurred only after the company intentionally defined its core brand philosophy—'Designed for Life'—and then amplified that clear message with advertising. This shows that a well-defined brand story is a powerful, distinct growth lever, separate from initial product-market fit.