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Brand Voice copywriting examples for ecomm & FMCG brands

Browse real-world brand voice examples from the best challenger brands in ecomm and FMCG. Click any example to see exactly how to use it for your own brand.

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Aesop — Aesop’s almost anti-copywriting tone of voice

Aesop

Aesop’s almost anti-copywriting tone of voice

This copy is about as far from Do Words Good-style copywriting as you can get. It's dense. It's hard to read. (Most copy targets a reading age of 11-ish. This is nearly 17.) And it makes no effort to meet the reader at their level. And yet, Aesop were acquired for $2.5 billion a few years ago. (Yeah, Billion, with a b.) So this copy is here as a reminder (to ourselves as much as anything) that there isn't just one way to write good copy.

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innocent — A classic example of the innocent TOV

innocent

A classic example of the innocent TOV

<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">We ummed and erred about including this one, if we're honest.</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Because we're huge fans of what innocent did for brand voice.</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">And this post has some genuinely brilliant copy in it. We love "the innocent department of seasonal straw-clutching".</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">But the innocent-ification of brand copy is something that has us conflicted. Wackaging was the bane of the copy game for a good decade, and innocent is where it started.</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">So. Buckle up for a nuanced take.</p>

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Naked Paper — Naked Paper’s properly clever tagline

Naked Paper

Naked Paper’s properly clever tagline

We're absolute suckers for a bit of wordplay that serves a purpose. (We're just suckers for wordplay in general, really.) And this new tagline-slash-positioning statement from when Naked Paper rebranded from Naked Sprout is an absolute banger. It's a positioning statement, a joke, a catchy line and a flag in the ground, all in 5 words. Too good. PS. How good is this little snippet from their rebranding announcement? <em>Naked Sprout made sense to us at the time. As a fledgling business our name was fresh, natural, and gave a nod to the fast-growing bamboo in our tissue.</em> <em>B</em><em>ut it turns out not everyone hears “sprout” and thinks “bamboo”. Five years on, and hundreds of questions about brussel sprouts later, we’ve grown as a team and as a business. </em>

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Tony's Chocolonely — Tony’s Chocolonely’s banger of an activation

Tony's Chocolonely

Tony’s Chocolonely’s banger of an activation

We're big, <em>big </em>fans of this Tony's activation in 2021. They set up a billboard in a shopping centre that was stacked with free full-size chocolate bars. Naturally, people helped themselves. And as the bars disappeared, it revealed a message that said: <em>"There's no such thing as free chocolate. Somebody always pays the price."</em> They got their product into people's hands <em>and </em>drove home their key message about exploitation in the industry <em>and </em>got a load of free press. Properly clever stuff. No notes.

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Huel — Huel’s smart community naming convention

Huel

Huel’s smart community naming convention

<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Cards on the table: we're not the biggest fans of the term Hueligan.</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">But when a brand has people wearing their merch in public, you can't really argue with the results.</p> <p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">From the unboxing experience to their welcome email to the Idris Elba press release to their Reddit community, absolutely everywhere you go in Huel's world, you find an invitation to become a Hueligan.</p> And that's because they're not <em>really </em>selling meal replacements at all. They're selling an identity that you can opt into and say "this is who I am" to the world. Really clever stuff.

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Overherd — Overherd’s pastiche challenger tone

Overherd

Overherd’s pastiche challenger tone

OK, before we get into this one, we should say that we weren’t 100% sold on this bit of copy when we saw it. (And, to be honest, we’re still not completely, 100% sure now.) But it did catch our attention and spark a 15-minute back-and-forth between us, so we’re including it anyway. We mean, it's an entirely language-led ad. 4 thumbs up there. And it's a really good example of a post-modern, anti-marketing voice. Love that too. And it uses the Effort Heuristic to make the product seem more valuable. Super smart. So far, all good things. Smashing it. <em>Exceeeept…</em> <strong>The copy feels </strong><em><strong>very, very, very, very </strong></em><strong>Oatly-coded. And that's the thing our wheels got stuck on.</strong>

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Wild Dose — Wild Dose’s on-brand retargeting ad

Wild Dose

Wild Dose’s on-brand retargeting ad

We're big fans of Wild Dose's brand voice. It's funny. It's self-aware. It's empowering. It's like if the Spice Girls, Fleabag and your mates' WhatsApp group chat were all mushed together to help support you through bloating and IBS. It's just so good. So when we got hit with this retargeting ad, it went straight in our swipe file. Maybe more brands are doing this and we're not seeing them, but this is one of the few ads we've seen that openly acknowledges that they're retargeting you <em>and somehow</em> manages to not feel creepy. Love it. No notes.

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