Think about trying to have a conversation with someone going through a bad break up. Or grieving. Or even just totally preoccupied with a new job or local drama. It鈥檚 tricky, right?
Well, if you鈥檙e a marketer, that鈥檚 your job right now. From the war in Europe to the lingering pandemic to swelling climate anxiety across the globe, consumers have more on their minds than ever. They鈥檙e also more digitally savvy, climate aware, and socially conscious鈥攚hich means messaging that worked in the past is likely to fall flat today.
To make sense of the changing landscape in outdoor-industry marketing, we spoke to experts across the space about how they鈥檙e updating their messaging to rise above the noise. Here are five strategies that get a thumbs-up from the pros.
1: Make Your Values Your Best-Selling Product
When it comes to trends, 鈥渂rands focusing on values-first marketing is top of the list,鈥 said Ben Herman, president and co-founder of the agency Mad Fish Digital, based in Portland, Oregon. For his clients鈥攚hich include several outdoor brands like Pacific Yurts and Solmate Socks鈥擧erman said the 鈥渢riple bottom line鈥 of people, profit, and planet is quickly becoming the new norm.
鈥淎s a whole, people are starting to change the paradigm of the shiny-new-product message鈥攖he Mad Men, ad-agency style of marketing,鈥 added Aileen Ottenweller, head of brand and business impact at Patagonia. Consumers today are wise to glib copywriting. Instead, they want moral substance and ethical leadership.
鈥淏rands, especially in the private sector, are playing a bigger role in how our society is being shaped,鈥 Ottenweller said. For Patagonia, a large part of its values-based marketing involves promoting responsible consumer behavior. To wit: the brand recently rolled out a customer-facing email signature with tips on how to identify ethical products鈥攁t Patagonia or elsewhere鈥攖o aid smarter buying decisions. The brand also leverages its catalog and blog to share stories of inclusivity and environmental stewardship. The point of those stories is not to sell anything, per se, but simply to plant a flag that says, 鈥淭his is who we are. This is what we care about.鈥
Of course, that kind of move is easier for Patagonia, which found its voice decades ago and stuck to it. If your company doesn鈥檛 yet have a strong ethical purpose, Tentree founder David Luba said the best way to create one is by finding an attainable goal you can work toward, one that will really make a difference.
鈥淭hese days, there鈥檚 so much technology available to verify what a company is doing and whether that work is authentic,鈥 Luba said. 鈥淵ou have to make sure you鈥檙e not just throwing money at something. You need to actually be solving a problem.鈥
Tentree, for example, has promoted its mission of being environmentally restorative (the brand plants ten trees for every product sold, offsetting the carbon costs of production) since its founding in 2012. A few years after the company got off the ground, the team invented a verification software called Veritree to track tree plantings and shed some light on the process. A decade later, Tentree is known across the industry as the tree-planting company; its mission is tied inextricably to its brand identity.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e honest about what you specialize in, you can be honest about what you don鈥檛 specialize in,鈥 said Luba. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what creates authenticity in a brand. I think we鈥檒l see more of that in the future, because nothing is more valuable and sought after than an authentic brand.鈥
2: Lean in to Being the Little Guy
鈥淧eople keep saying there鈥檚 going to be more consolidation in the outdoor industry, but I鈥檓 not buying it,鈥 said Mark Boles, founder of the outdoor-lifestyle shop Intrinsic Provisions in Hingham, Massachusetts. Instead, Boles sees a resurgence of cottage brands, the artisan economy, and hyper-local products. Consumers, he feels, are tired of the unrelenting sameness that characterizes big-box chains like REI and Dicks. As the outdoor market matures, people are learning to trust smaller brands that fit their personal style and reflect their values.
A great example: one of Boles鈥 best-selling brands is Vermont Glove, which makes goat-leather accessories for $80 to $140 a pop. The products are high quality and the look is trending, but that鈥檚 not necessarily why they鈥檙e selling, Boles said. Vermont Glove leans hard into its reputation as a hyperlocal, family-owned business. From the brand name itself to the 鈥淢ade in Vermont Since 1920鈥 slogan on its packaging, the company鈥檚 image resonates with proud New Englanders. To drive the point home, Vermont Glove isn鈥檛 shy about advertising that its leather is sourced from American farms, or that it invests in homegrown community projects.
Another good example is Parlor Skis, a made-to-order ski company in Boston. Parlor builds its products from scratch according to customers鈥 exact specifications, complete with colorful, personalized top sheets. Want skis stamped with portraits of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, or the view from your childhood back porch? Parlor can do that. The goods aren鈥檛 cheap, but people are willing to pay for the brand鈥檚 artistic touch and small-batch feel. Plus, said co-founder Mark Wallace, bespoke gear is an instant conversation piece: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a story on every lift.鈥
Big-box stores and online giants are also starting to take heed of the 鈥渓ittle guy鈥 trend. Brands like Backcountry and Black Diamond are now working hard to customize each new store they build to suit their respective locations. 鈥淓very time we go into a new market, we try to really listen to what the people in the community care about,鈥 said Chris Purkey, Backcountry鈥檚 head of Gearheads and retail. To do that, the brand partners with local nonprofits and other organizations that support the community鈥檚 values. Public Lands has a similar program, donating volunteer time and cash to conservation nonprofits that work in its stores鈥 immediate vicinity.
The takeaway: if you鈥檙e a small brand with just a few employees, or a really scrappy startup, tell that story. Flaunt the benefits of being small. Advertise the amount of attention you鈥檙e able to give to each product that goes out the door. Customers will reward you for it.
3. Let the Thrill of Experiences Do the Marketing for You
It鈥檚 not just customers who are hungry for interaction as we emerge from the pandemic. According to Eric Henderson, CEO of Meteorite PR in Boulder, Colorado, media and business partners are equally starved for in-person events. That leaves experiential marketing鈥攁nd face-to-face PR鈥攑oised for a big comeback.
According to Henderson, Meteorite has seen 鈥渉uge success鈥 from its 国产吃瓜黑料 Camp concept鈥攁 miniature industry bash held near Meteorite鈥檚 headquarters鈥攁nd its new media demo at Colorado鈥檚 Eldora Ski Area, for this very reason. Both events provide an opportunity for gear designers, reps, and media to rub elbows and try the latest gear from Meteorite鈥檚 clients. 鈥淭he interaction is huge,鈥 said Henderson. 鈥淚t鈥檚 super valuable to journalists because it gives them long leads on stories, and it helps PR develop relationships with media they can tap into when exciting news comes up.鈥
Retailers can get in on the action, too. Outdoor Divas, a Vail ski shop that caters exclusively to women, holds demo days throughout the season. The events are some of the shop鈥檚 most successful marketing efforts, according to store founder Kim Walker. 鈥淲e have women trying 10 or 12 pairs of skis in a day,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great experience for them, it鈥檚 hugely educational for our employees, and it drives traffic and sales to us as well.鈥
Or, if you鈥檙e a brand, you can cut out the middleman and get into the experience game directly. After years of pandemic-driven hiatus, Fj盲llr盲ven is bringing back its Classic Series in the summer of 2022, hosting large group backpacking trips for customers in six countries. And Parlor Skis has relaunched its build-your-own-ski classes to help people understand what goes into a custom setup.
鈥淓xperiences are fundamental,鈥 said Henderson. 鈥淪haring the natural world is why we鈥檙e all in this business to start with. If you鈥檙e not sharing nature personally with someone鈥攊f you鈥檙e just doing it through digital or social media鈥擨 think you鈥檙e missing the point.鈥
And, we would add, a big business opportunity.
4. Find Alternatives to Traditional Data-Gathering Methods
Over the past five years, consumers have become wary of digital marketing strategies and the way their data is being used鈥攁nd with good reason. These days, a large number of consumers are suspicious of tech giants like Meta, whose data many marketers rely on for ad targeting. 鈥淭he way consumers see big tech companies is changing,鈥 said Rebecca Heard, VP of brand, marketing, and e-commerce for evo, an 11-door retailer with stores in the U.S. and Canada. 鈥淐ustomers in the outdoor space鈥攚ho may be especially mindful of the choices they make鈥攄on鈥檛 want us fueling big tech companies鈥 growth.鈥
That leaves marketers scrambling to find alternative ways to source the data required to provide the level of ad personalization consumers have come to expect. The solution to this digital paradox? For one thing, Herman at Mad Fish Digital encourages his clients to use Customer Data Platforms (CDPs), which allow brands to manage their own cookies without having to go through a third party like Meta. First-party data collection, Heard agreed, is fast becoming the norm, especially as CDPs become more affordable for smaller brands.
The trick to using CDPs successfully, Herman said, is transparency鈥攂oth in your privacy policy and on those now-ubiquitous website popups. 鈥淵ou have to be really explicit,鈥 he cautioned, in letting customers know you鈥檙e tracking browsing patterns using first-party cookies. The message users need to understand is that you鈥檙e not selling their data, or using it in a nefarious way. It needs to be crystal clear that you鈥檙e using it only to heighten customer experience.
There are other ways to do it. Some brands, like Backcountry, are exploring loyalty programs that give customers added value on their purchases in exchange for data. Other brands are polling customers through surveys. Evo is experimenting with a new SMS text message program to alert customers about events near them. More low-tech than ad targeting, SMS campaigns can nevertheless provide intimate connections with customers using data that many companies already have.
鈥淥f course, the goal is to not annoy the customer,鈥 Heard said. 鈥淚f you spam them, they鈥檙e going to block you or unsubscribe. But if you use their data mindfully and with permission, they鈥檒l come back and shop with you again.鈥
5. Reach Beyond the Industry to Unlock New Markets
In 2017, The North Face partnered with Spotify to release an exclusive song only available in rainy weather鈥攁 campaign that coincided with the launch of a new rain shell, the Apex Flex GTX. In 2021, the brand partnered with Sonos Radio, releasing soundscapes from some of the world鈥檚 most extreme adventure destinations.
鈥淐ollaborations offer a great opportunity to bring in that element of surprise鈥攖hat breakthrough element that gets people to stop scrolling for a moment and see what we鈥檙e doing,鈥 said Mike Ferris, VP of global brand management at The North Face. Cross-industry collabs also help outdoor companies reach new consumers, added Herman, especially those who might not consider themselves 鈥渙utdoorsy,鈥 per se.
Merrell鈥檚 chief marketing officer, Janice Tennant, said evidence of crossover power has long been a growth-driver at her brand. 鈥淲e already see the Merrell Moab [one of the company鈥檚 best-selling shoes] all the time in airports and in the streets,鈥 she said, adding that Merrell customers figured out on their own that the brand鈥檚 products are suited to more than just outdoor activities. 鈥淭he evolution we鈥檙e seeing, though, is brands not being afraid of telling that story,鈥 said Tennant.
Collabs also provide a way for brands to support nonprofits, affinity organizations, and artists of color鈥攁nd they鈥檙e not limited to big corporations. Running brand Janji, for example, commissions print designs from Indigenous and local artists for each of its activewear collections. Vermont-based ski accessory brand Skida also has an extensive partnership model and has collaborated with DEI-focused cycling team Legion of Los Angeles, sunglass brand Pit Vipers, and Alaska-based fishing brand Salmon Sisters, among others.
鈥淚 think [collaborations] are just going to gain momentum,鈥 Herman said, 鈥渟pecifically combining outdoor content with lifestyle.鈥
More Advice from Industry Pros
鈥淢arketing is moving from a solely campaign-based model to an always-on model. We鈥檒l still need larger campaigns to break through the noise, but between those peaks, we have to have these other moments鈥攚e have to continually surprise and delight the consumer through unique partnerships, earned media, and press.鈥
鈥擬ike Ferris, VP of global brand management at The North Face
鈥淚 think we鈥檒l see the trade show model die or become outdated. Between that, tariffs, and supply chain issues, we can鈥檛 keep marketing products eight months in advance. People don鈥檛 want to read about gear until it鈥檚 available to them. So I think we鈥檒l start seeing earned media, press releases, and similar things launched on a rolling basis鈥攏ot just in big gear guides that happen twice a year.鈥
鈥擡ric Henderson, CEO of Meteorite PR
鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a [messaging] shift from this idea of the outdoors as an individual pursuit to a community one. It was colonization over time that…turned [the outdoors] into this individualistic thing instead of the religious, communal space that it was in the past. That鈥檚 changing.鈥
鈥擬ark Boles, owner of Intrinsic Provisions; former advertising and marketing strategist
鈥淚 think we鈥檒l start to see more micro-influencers rather than macro ones. Customers are getting savvy. They know when someone who has a bunch of followers is just trying to push product. I don鈥檛 think ambassadors will go away, but the space is maturing.鈥
鈥擝en Herman, president of Mad Fish Digital