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- How Surreal Built a Brand using Clever Positioning, Tone of Voice and Attention-Grabbing Stunts to become the Fastest Growing Cereal Brand in the UK and Break into a $40B Industry in 2 Years š„£
How Surreal Built a Brand using Clever Positioning, Tone of Voice and Attention-Grabbing Stunts to become the Fastest Growing Cereal Brand in the UK and Break into a $40B Industry in 2 Years š„£
Talk about eating the competition for breakfast
How Surreal Built a Brand using Clever Positioning, Tone of Voice and Attention-Grabbing Stunts to Become the Fastest Growing Cereal Brand in the UK and Break into a $40B Industry in 2 Years
Who will love this
Frosted Flake fiends
Grownups who were once cereal loving kids
Challenger brand founders
Today
Good afternoon.
Todayās letter is about a brand-spankinā new brand. Itās a good example of a challenger brand breaking into an established market. Itās also a masterclass in using positioning, tone of voice and attention to shape a brand that punches well above its weight to drive growth.
Surreal are high protein low carb cereal for adults. They have:
šÆ Used clever positioning to break into a $40B industry in just 2 years
š Gained 40,000 followers on LinkedIn in one year (give āem a follow, you wonāt be sorry)
š Become the fastest growing cereal brand in UK
šØ Crushed visual and verbal identity from day dot
Pour yourself a bowl and letās dig in. š„£
Amanda
How product, positioning and attention work together to shape the challenger brand taking on Big Cereal š„£
Surrealās founders, Jac Chetland and Kit Gammell, launched Surreal in 2022 to address a lack of nutritious and low-sugar options in the cereal aisle. Every other cereal was full of flavor, full of personalityā¦and full of sugar. But there was no low sugar option.
But instead of marketing based on the logical merits of low-sugar cereal (snoozefest), they dug into the nostalgia of eating cereal as a kid. Their whole brand strategy is basically: remind people of their childhood. You know: trinkets in your cereal box, colorful, playful mascots - fun.
Hereās how Surreal broke into the cereal market:
Business strategy šø
The global cereal market is big business, at $40.3B in 2022 and projected to hit $53B by 2030. Thereās also increasing demand for healthy or speciality cereal, like gluten free and diabetic friendly cereal. And Surreal is perfectly positioned to capture that demand.
Surreal got their start as a DTC business, but they didnāt stay that way. I think some DTC companies are so set on being DTC that they miss the benefit of retail. Surreal is now in Sainsburyās and Whole Foods, on top of their subscription sales.
Brand strategy šÆ
Like any good brand strategy, Surrealās brand strategy needs to support its business strategy, (sell more cereal). Surreal started as a DTC brand, so they needed traction to convince retailers to stock the cereal. But building a DTC company using digital ads alone is dangerous (rising CACs, youāre dependent on one channel). Surrealās brand is one that people want to talk about - which brings cost of acquisition down and brand awareness up.
It worked: Surreal could demonstrate to retailers that they were bringing net new consumers into the cereal aisle. That means incremental purchase on top of the average cart value: an attractive proposition for a retailer.
Now - letās be clear. Surreal has an excellent product. You cannot market your way out of a product that doesnāt have product market fit. Theyāve got it. But they didnāt stop there: Surreal are investing in brand early on while nailing a smart distribution strategy. Smart brand and distribution strategies have compounding effects and are worth getting right.
So what are the ingredients of Surrealās brand?
Positioning: Joyful breakfast cereal. Zero sugar. Low carbs. High protein. In the cereal world, it feels like thereās only two options: super sugary cereal and tastes-like-cardboard healthy cereal. Good positioning is part gut and part data. Surreal positioning brings the nostalgia of your favorite childhood cereal together with the nutrition that adult you knows you need.
Positioning happens in the mind. The best brands come from listening to what people need, finding the space you need to hold in peopleās minds, and creating a category around that positioning. Surrealās crushing it.
Verbal identity: playful. Surrealās voice is a bit like Liquid Death, Oatly, or Innocent Smoothies: you could probably cover up the visual and pick the brand from the tone of voice. Fun fact: Surrealās writer was previously at Innocent Smoothies (known for their voice and viral stunts).
Verbal identity, in my opinion, is one of the simplest ways to be memorable. In the same way Oatly became the sarcastic oat milk brand or Innocent became the zany smoothie brand, Surreal is quickly claiming a unique voice in cereal.
Testing, testing, testing for attention. Surreal understands the value of attention. To quote Bill Bernbach, if your advertising goes unnoticed, everything else is academic. Baby brands without massive budgets who can wield attention well have a competitive advantage. Surreal has the benefit of counting former Innocent senior creative John Thornton among its early employees. But if you look closely, youāll see that Surreal is constantly testing for attention and using what they learn to plan their next stunt. āMake it go viralā isnāt a strategy. Consistently getting people talking about breakfast cereal? Thatās a strategy.
Thornton has brought Innocentās strategy of generating āsoft outrage,ā into Surreal, starting with his resignation from Innocent, which had amassed 2.5M on LinkedIn. They done things like sell billboard space to their customers on Black Friday, āvandalizingā a billboard with cardboard, and āaccidentallyā selling the bossās car on the Surreal website.
@eat_surrealuk Look closeley youll spot a harness š„¹
Something I found interesting as I was researching this brand was the link between Surreal and oil. Yes, oil. Founder Kit Gammell is son of Sir Bill Gammell, Scottish oil tycoon, and Kitās brother, Mike, is hte founder of Days, a non-alcoholic beer company. I think this is worth noting for the same reason Nick Asbury noted it here:
āBoth Surreal and Days are part of that wave of Gen Z, voguish brands that like to talk about āauthenticityā a lot. Thereās a sense of fourth-wall-breaking informality about them: āWeāre nice people, not like those stuffy old traditional businesses!ā But when you look at the lineage, the Gammells of today are the direct inheritors of the investment banks or oil companies of the past, just in more casual clothes.ā
Why does this matter? Brands have a history of papering over inconvenient truths, and brands have soft power. I think we should all be in the habit of interrogating brands, whoās driving them and who stands to benefit from their success. Itās worth reading Nickās full post.
Brand marketing moves š
To love and learn from.
Pseudo-Celebrity endorsements. One of Surrealās early campaigns featured a number of faux-celebrity endorsements. This functioned as an attention-grabbing way to get Surreal in front of people. Getting Ronaldo, Dwayne Johnson, Serena Williams and Michael Jordan to endorse your product on a budget? Improbableā¦but not impossible.
New Year's resolutions campaign. How do you stand out at the time everyone is making healthy new yearās resolutions? Surreal whipped up the type of slapdash clipart billboards that would strike fear in the heart of any graphic designer. Why? Attention. Surreal figured out what everyone else would be saying (ānew year, new meā - boring) and said the opposite: āCanāt be bothered this month? Neither can we.ā
Notella. To launch a chocolate hazelnut flavored cereal, Surreal got crafty. They crept right up to the legal line of what they could say. They pointedly did not name specific trademarked brands, instead hinting at the taste and name.
What can we learn from Surreal?
šÆāāļø Hire for your brand. One of the interesting lessons here is to have the right people in your team. John Thornton is an absolute get for Surreal. If humor is part of your brand, hire a comedian or a writer whoās demonstrated they can write jokes. Or really - if voice is one of your distinctive assets, make sure youāve got someone in the team who can write like heck.
āļø Remove the red tape. Itās really clear when you look at Surrealās marketing that theyāve empowered their marketing team to make decisions and ship work fast. Most teams donāt have this freedom. This is a lesson in what happens when you have the right people, a shared understanding of brand voice and the ability to ship work quickly.
š Try, try again. Similar to the above, I think a big part of Surrealās success comes from being willing to try things and not panic at the first sign that a piece of work hasnāt been a smashing success. If you scroll through Surrealās LinkedIn, youāll see theyāre constantly trying new things. The more tests you ship, the faster youāll hone in on things that really work.
Thatās all this week!
P.S. Ever received 1 million spam calls after registering a domain name? Iāve received 18 calls today (after 16 yesterday). Itās infuriating. If youāve got tips (beyond registering on the Do Not Call registry) - hit me up.
Amanda āļø
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