For a spirit like Pisco, which is unfamiliar to most U.S. consumers, Suyo should focus marketing on its brand name first. The goal is for "Suyo" to become synonymous with Pisco, much like Patrón became for tequila, rather than trying to educate the market on the entire category.
Marketers often mistake strategic positioning (finding a niche) for true category creation. A new category introduces a solution to a problem customers haven't yet articulated, requiring education on why they need a thing they've never bought before.
While product differentiation is beneficial, it's not always possible. A brand's most critical job is to be distinctive and instantly recognizable. This mental availability, achieved through consistent creative, logo, and tone, is more crucial for cutting through market noise than having a marginally different feature set.
Instead of the traditional CPG model of acquiring distinct brands (like Coca-Cola owning Sprite), Breeze is building a centralized platform. Various "feel-good tonics" exist under the single, strong Breeze brand, similar to how Apple sells the iPhone, MacBook, and AirPods under one unified identity.
Bootstrappers lack the capital and time to establish a new market category. A better strategy is to anchor your product in a known category (e.g., "site audit tool") and then use your unique features (e.g., "that also fixes the issues") as a key differentiator.
Most product categories are commodities with minimal functional differences. Success, as shown by Liquid Death in the water category, hinges on building an emotional connection through branding and packaging, which are the primary drivers of consumer choice over minor product benefits.
Instead of general marketing, spirits brand Suyo Pisco was advised to deploy a team of "ambassadors" to bars. Their job is to loudly and clearly order a "Suyo Tonic," creating organic curiosity from other patrons and normalizing the brand-specific call-out, effectively creating demand from the ground up.
Many marketers mistakenly start with the goal of creating a new category. However, a new category only emerges as a downstream consequence of a strong, existing demand that is poorly served by all current products. The demand must exist before a new category can be successfully established.
In a crowded market, brand is defined by the product experience, not marketing campaigns. Every interaction must evoke the intended brand feeling (e.g., "lovable"). This transforms brand into a core product responsibility and creates a powerful, defensible moat that activates word-of-mouth and differentiates you from competitors.
Many 'category creation' efforts fail because they just rename an existing solution. True category creation happens when customers perceive the product as fundamentally different from all alternatives, even without an official name for it. The customer's mental bucketing is the only one that matters.
Bold Bean Co. found that creating a premium product in a "forgotten, dull" category like beans was a strategic advantage. The novelty makes consumers talk. People find it entertaining to become obsessed with beans, generating more word-of-mouth than launching yet another premium chocolate brand.