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How to grow without paid marketing
Lessons from Bobbie's full funnel approach
Bobbie CEO Laura Modi says growth is 60% your product and brand, 40% how you get the word out
Too many brands get stuck in a cycle where they absolutely need to dump more money into paid marketing to keep growing. Rising CACs, diminishing returns, saturated audiences, and picking off all the low-hanging fruit make it virtually impossible to continue to scale this way forever.
A couple times, I’ve had founders ask me what would happen if they just turned off paid marketing. It’s not a great position to be in to realize that all new customer acquisition would come to a screeching halt.
If you ask yourself this question and can name at least a handful of other means by which new customers could, and already do, find you, you’ve probably focused thoughtfully on product experience, retention, and effective organic marketing.
If you’re not the founder I just described, fear not — there’s no time like the present to focus on some of these longer tail wins. The baby formula brand Bobbie has become the model for sustainable growth that doesn’t rely solely on paid, so let’s dive in to how they did it.
First, a few caveats
The importance of paid marketing
To be clear, paid marketing is a key component of a holistic growth strategy 9 times out of 10. Paid marketing is so ubiquitously associated with growth marketing because it’s powerful, it’s scalable, and it delivers immediate results.
You can also get feedback incredibly quickly with just a little bit of spend, and I actually recommend running some paid marketing tests, especially early on, before making larger changes to your funnel, product, operational processes, etc. Some quick pressure tests on your paid channels to validate your assumptions will be much cheaper and lower-lift in the long run.
On the other hand, the trap is when you’ve gone too deep on paid marketing without focusing on more sustainable, longer time-to-value channels, leaving paid as your only avenue to more scale. Pay attention to what percentage of your new customers are attributable to paid marketing — you’ll need to start de-risking your marketing mix if this number is near or above two thirds.
The channels that won’t work on their own
Social media: Some brands think that focusing all their marketing efforts on building a relevant social presence, which is “free”, is the key. But just posting on social, even with the best strategy, isn’t going to get you far. These two things should be obvious, but often aren’t:
Followers ≠ customers
Going viral isn’t a strategy or a lever within your control (Please, do not tell your brand marketer that their target is to go viral, I beg you!)
Organic social media is critical for building authenticity and legitimacy, which is a worthwhile payoff even if it doesn’t directly and predictably drive customers. Where social can be a results-driver is with an influencer strategy, but that’s arguably just another form of paid.
Big offline brand bets: Out of home, TV, audio, splashy brand campaigns, and the like are going to give you sticker shock if you haven’t done them before. They’re VERY expensive — and aren’t the kinds of channels you’ll see results from with a small test. Putting resources behind these channels isn’t recommended until you’ve successfully scaled your baseline paid digital channels and are 100% confident in your funnel.
Ultimately, these types of buys come down to your risk tolerance. Things can go wrong or can take much longer to show green shoots. What’s the most you’re willing to spend to potentially learn something, but with zero immediate results?
SEO and content: A scaled content strategy can be incredibly effective, but it takes a lot of time and work to get there. All too often brands give up on SEO because it’s been a few months and they haven’t seen results. I would liken this channel to investing your money — you can’t start today and expect results tomorrow, but the sooner you start the better off your future self will be.
Ultimately, social media, big brand bets, and SEO are all important components of a well-diversified marketing mix, along with paid.
Bobbie’s approach
Bobbie’s homepage as of March 2024
If you’re not familiar with Bobbie, they’re an organic baby formula brand that’s become the model for sustainable growth, particularly in the face of the crisis that was the global formula shortage in 2022.
But they wouldn’t have been able to weather this storm without making a lot of thoughtful, focused decisions from the beginning.
Building a foundational brand
On a mission to create a better baby formula, Bobbie launched mid-2020. They billed their product as the first European-style formula to hit the US market, meaning the formula contained less additives than formula produced in the US.
An excellent, differentiated product and strong product market fit were the foundational building blocks of Bobbie’s initial success. Bobbie deeply understood their market and the customers within it:
They benefitted from having few competitors, as the formula market has exceptionally high barriers to entry
They recognized the finite nature of their TAM — parents who have a baby who needs formula — and that people entered and exited this market every day
They deeply understood their customers, and therefore, how to speak to them:
Their market is parents whose babies need formula — they weren’t convincing parents to switch from breastfeeding
Once parents find a formula that works for their baby, they rely on accessibility and consistency — making Bobbie’s business a perfect candidate for a subscription model, without it feeling forced
Parents buying formula for their babies aren’t making snap decisions or impulse purchases, and need enough information to make the right buying decisions
Bobbie also understood that the typical ecommerce playbook could only take them so far, as they were required to build a deep level of trust with parents on a very specific purchasing journey before they would buy. Understanding what parents were researching was critical to building trustworthiness into their site experience and content strategy.
Rather than thinking that their marketing channels drove growth, Bobbie thought about growth as being driven by their offer — giving parents the option to trial their formula before purchasing or subscribing — and marketing channels being the vehicle to drive to that offer.
Successful DTC growth in these early days was built on these foundations, and allowed Bobbie to diversify into retail (specifically Target, huge!) within 2 years of launch.
Key takeaway: An excellent product, strong PMF, and deep understanding of your customers are essential for driving repeatable growth.