Celsius Holdings announced in early 2025 that zero-sugar energy drinks represent the fastest-growing segment in the energy category, and positioned its product line to ride that wave through 2026, according to MSN. The company reported that low- and zero-sugar variants now drive the majority of category expansion, and Celsius structured its portfolio—and its distribution partnership with PepsiCo—to capture shelf velocity as retailers allocate more facings to the segment.
The mechanic is simple: Celsius did not claim to invent the zero-sugar trend. It claimed to be the best-positioned brand to benefit from a consumer shift already documented by third-party data. The company used that framing to secure expanded distribution through PepsiCo's network, pitching retailers on velocity rather than innovation. Shelf space followed the category story, and Celsius products moved faster because buyers believed they were stocking the winning segment, not just a single SKU.
This works because retailers allocate space based on category momentum, not brand charisma. When a brand presents itself as the natural choice within a documented growth segment, the buyer's decision simplifies to a risk calculation: the brand is either right about the trend, or the trend data is wrong. If the trend is real—and in this case, multiple sources confirmed zero-sugar energy's expansion—the retailer who stocks the aligned brand captures the velocity. Celsius turned category data into a distribution wedge.
The play is replicable for any physical-product brand in a shifting category. First, identify a documented consumer trend in your category—preferably one cited in trade press or retail reports. Do not invent the trend. Find the data, name the source, and frame your product as the natural beneficiary. Second, build your pitch deck around category velocity, not product features. Show the buyer that stocking your SKU is a bet on a trend they already believe in, not a gamble on your brand. Third, use that narrative to unlock distribution partnerships or retail conversations that were previously closed. If the trend is real, the distribution follows.
A small brand can run this at modest cost. Start by pulling category reports from sources like Nielsen, SPINS, or Circana—many publish topline findings publicly or through trade associations. Isolate the one trend where your product naturally fits. Write a one-page sell sheet that leads with the category data, cites the source, and positions your product as the aligned choice. Use that sheet in every distributor pitch, retail email, and buyer meeting. If you cannot afford distribution partnerships, use the same framing in direct-to-retailer outreach: 'Zero-waste packaging is growing at 18% annually according to [source]. Our line captures that buyer without inventory risk.' The cost is research time and a clean PDF. The return is shelf space allocated to a trend, not a pitch.
The broader pattern: brands that frame themselves as category beneficiaries rather than disruptors get faster distribution adoption. Buyers move on velocity, and velocity follows documented trends. Celsius used zero-sugar data to become the shelf choice before competitors repositioned.
The takeaway
Position your product as the natural beneficiary of a documented category trend, then pitch distribution based on velocity, not features.
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