Dove Men+Care announced a product reformulation by advertising inside Strava, the fitness tracking app used by runners, cyclists, and triathletes, according to Marketing Dive. The brand placed ads promoting its new formula directly in the activity feed where users log workouts and compare performance, reaching an audience already filtered for daily body-care routines and sweat management.
The campaign combined paid placements on Strava with coordinated posts on Instagram and TikTok, but the Strava buy was the lever. By going where the audience already congregates to discuss effort and recovery, Dove sidestepped the generic feed competition that drowns CPG product news in beauty and lifestyle content.
This worked because Strava is a high-intent environment for physical self-maintenance. Users open the app to record effort, track progress, and compare splits. They are already thinking about what their body needs next: hydration, nutrition, and skin care after long runs or rides. A product reformulation ad in that context reads as relevant information, not interruption. The platform also attracts users who buy premium personal-care items regularly—people who run 50+ miles a week or ride centuries are not budget-shopping on body wash.
The mechanism is channel selection by behavior, not demographic. Instead of targeting men aged 25-45 on Meta or Google, Dove targeted people who have uploaded a workout in the past seven days. That narrows the audience to active users of antiperspirant and body wash, the exact categories Dove reformulated. The ad becomes news in the right feed.
A small physical-product brand copies this by finding the single platform where its user base already reports progress or asks for advice. If you make a hydration powder, you advertise in Strava or TrainingPeaks. If you make a posture brace, you buy in subreddit sidebars or Discord servers for desk workers tracking standing-desk time. If you make a knife sharpener, you sponsor YouTube creators in cooking or bushcraft who film sharpening sequences. The play is to deliver product news where the audience is already performing the behavior your product supports.
Run a $500 test. Pick one platform where your customer publicly tracks an activity your product solves for. Write one ad that presents your product as the next step in their process. If you make a sleep mask, sponsor a sleep-tracking app's newsletter. If you make a cable organizer, sponsor a desk-setup subreddit's sidebar for one month. Track click-through and conversion separately from your general Meta or Google spend. If the cost per acquisition is lower than your blended average, shift 10% of budget into that channel and repeat.
The broader pattern: product news works better when embedded in the user's existing tracking loop than when inserted into entertainment feeds. Strava users see a reformulation ad as progress information, not as brand noise.