Conair reported to Marketing Dive that AI-driven video production cut creative turnaround from weeks to 24 hours, allowing the appliance brand to test dozens of ad variants without the cost structure of studio shoots. Dove Men+Care, launching reformulated body wash, skipped beauty-category publishers entirely and ran campaign media through Strava, the fitness-tracking platform, alongside Instagram and TikTok.
Conair's creative team uses generative AI to produce localized video ads at scale, adjusting messaging and visual assets for regional retail partners without reshooting. The brand told Marketing Dive the speed gain freed budget from production overhead and redirected it toward higher test volume across paid social channels. Dove Men+Care, owned by Unilever, treated the reformulation as a fitness-oriented launch rather than a beauty play, anchoring media spend on platforms where the target audience logs daily activity data.
The mechanism is channel adjacency paired with production velocity. Conair's AI workflow removes the bottleneck between creative approval and market test, so the brand iterates on performance data in days instead of quarters. Dove Men+Care's Strava buy sidesteps the crowded beauty media environment and places the message inside a behavior loop—users open the app to track runs, see the ad in a context primed for wellness purchases, and associate the product with the activity they just completed. According to Marketing Dive, both brands reported stronger engagement than their legacy media mix delivered, though neither disclosed conversion benchmarks.
The reuse is straightforward. A physical-product brand with modest budget runs this play in three moves. First, adopt a lightweight AI video tool—Runway, Synthesia, or HeyGen—to generate three to five short-form ad variants from a single product shoot. Script each variant for a different customer job: one for gifting, one for daily use, one for problem-solving. Keep the footage identical, swap the voiceover and on-screen text. Production cost per variant drops to under $50 once the base asset exists.
Second, identify the adjacent platform where your customer spends non-shopping time. If you sell hydration products, buy ads on Strava or MapMyRun. If you sell desk accessories, test LinkedIn video ads or Substack sponsorships. If you sell pet products, run pre-roll on Spotify's pet-themed playlists. The goal is not scale—it is message placement inside a habitual behavior that aligns with product use. A $500 weekly test budget is enough to validate engagement before committing to a longer flight.
Third, measure the delta against your existing paid social baseline. Compare cost per landing page visit, add-to-cart rate, and repeat purchase rate between the adjacent channel and your standard Instagram or Facebook feed ads. If the adjacent channel wins on two of three, shift 20 percent of your paid budget to it and run the test for 30 days. The AI creative workflow makes the incremental cost near zero, so the risk is time, not money.
The broader pattern is creative velocity as channel strategy. When production cycles compress, brands can afford to test narrow audience segments and niche platforms that legacy media planning would reject as too small. Conair and Dove Men+Care both escaped the efficiency trap of buying reach on saturated channels by making the creative itself cheaper and faster to produce. The edge is not the AI tool—it is the brand's willingness to treat creative as a variable input instead of a fixed cost, then pair that flexibility with media placements outside the category playbook.
The takeaway
AI video cuts Conair turnaround to 24 hours; Dove Men+Care skips beauty media for Strava, proving adjacency beats category saturation.
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