The Growth Newsletter #157 Valentine's Day hooks. Repeatable themes. Reframe the boring. |
2024 🟩⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ 2025
We're officially one month through 2024. Quick check-in: Are you still making progress towards your goals? Topics for the day: Valentine's Day hooks. Repeatable themes. Reframe the boring. Let's dive in 🪅
– Neal |
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1. Applying hooks to Valentine's Day ad copy
Insight's data derived from NRF. Hook types from Un-ignorable Hooks. Americans (mostly men) spent $26,000,000,000 for Valentine's Day last year, and only 52% was for their partner. The rest was for their family, friends, coworkers, and kids.
It's one of the biggest gift-giving days of the year and is a huge opportunity for DTC brands. You should test some ads using copy and creative targeted to Valentine's Day. Here are some example ad openers using a few of our hook types: #1. Credibility: 12,166 boyfriends have already bought X for their partner. - Leverages the social proof of how many have bought from you.
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It also triggers an "Oh damn, I'm behind.”
- Depending on the product, you can try variations other than boyfriend or partner.
#2. Fear: There's only 2 more days until Valentine's Day. #3 Counter-Narrative: Valentine's Day is BS. But your love isn't. Treat your partner anyway. - Gets attention with the opener.
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Calls out the growing sentiment that people think Valentine's Day is overly consumeristic or fake but reframes the day as a positive.
#4 Celebration + Curiosity: It's Jack and Jill's 25th anniversary! Here's what Jack got her for their special day. - Ad creative could show a couple with Jill looking excitedly down at the gift she's getting, but you can't see what it is. Piques the curiosity. Here's a quirky AI example:
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#5 Identity:
Still looking for the perfect gift to show your love?
#6. Surprise:48% of Valentine's Day gifts aren't for partners. Treat your mom for Valentine's - Surprising fact gets their attention.
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Make it seem socially normal to buy for someone other than a partner.
- It reminds them of a specific person they could buy for.
#7. Value: 10 Valentine's Day gifts that will WOW her (him/them). - The ad sends to a piece of content where your product is the first on the list.
As always, get creative with your Valentine's Day experiments. |
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2. Create repeatable themes and formats Insight from us, featuring MrBeast.
Look closely at most successful creators and you'll notice something. For example, let's take a look at MrBeast's YouTube channel: |
Just in his last 20 videos, you can see a few repeat formats: -
$1 vs $XXXXXXXX [thing]
- [something] vs [adjective] [something else]
- I [verb] X [thing]
- World's [superlative] [thing]
- Somebody surviving something and winning money
You'll also notice his thumbnails have recurring elements. And the videos themselves follow a certain structural pattern. There are a few great reasons to find repeatable formats: -
If you like $1 vs $1,000,000 Hotel, you'll probably like $1 vs $1,000,000,000 Yacht. Which in itself is smart because:
- It's easy for the YouTube algorithm to know what to recommend next.
- It's easy for your audience to decide what they should watch next. It's de-risked that they're going to like it.
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If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Hence, the 5,000 Marvel movies. Every piece of content is an investment. You de-risk the investment by repeating what worked in the past.
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It's less effort. This newsletter has a repeat format: Intro → sponsors → 3 growth tactics → news → something fun → outro. I'm not reinventing the wheel each time. I know what a "growth tactic" looks like. I like to say it's more like "filling in the blanks."
Get creative and find your repeatable content formats. Then, you can be creative within those boundaries.
Note: This concept also applies to ads :). If you find something that works, keep experimenting with that idea. |
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3. Reframe and re-position an existing boring product
Insight from First The Trousers. 1986: 6 pounds of carrots eaten per person per year 2002:
11 pounds per person
The cause for the 80% increase? The invention of baby carrots. |
Baby carrots now account for 80% of all carrot consumption. (For those who don't know, baby carrots are simply a sweeter variety of carrots that are chopped up into shorter pieces and have rounded edges.) What can be learned from the humble baby carrot:
#1. Create a new experience for an existing product - A full-sized carrot: A vegetable you cook.
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A baby carrot: A healthy snack food—at home or on the go.
This shift allowed for 4 interesting benefits: - Convenience as a value prop. Making carrots "grab and go."
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Reframe from vegetable to snack. Are carrots the healthiest vegetable? Unlikely. Are they healthier than a chocolate bar? Absolutely.
- New usage
occasions. Instead of just in soups, now carrots can go in veggies trays, kid's lunches, and in the backpack for a snack in the park.
- New
distribution opportunities. As a grab-and-go snack, it makes sense for them to be in gas stations—a place that will never have a vegetable aisle.
#2. Push into the new category, don't fight it
Instead of leaning into the health value prop (carrots good—junk food bad), they found that treating baby carrots as a part of the junk food category, rather than in opposition to it, led to 10% more sales.
People already know they're healthier than candy and chocolate. People need to be convinced that they're delicious, addictive, and indulgent, and can satisfy their junk food craving. |
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News you can use:
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Want to be featured in front of 89,680 founders and marketers? Learn more here–booking into April. |
Something fun From some random 90s nostalgia account on Instagram that probably didn't make this: |
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