The British BBQ and the white space opportunity

We all love a BBQ and with us all staying closer to home, we are set to be in the garden grilling our food whenever we can.

But we don’t just barbecue our food outside at this time of year, we also talk about BBQs (a lot, as it turns out). Our latest social report, reveals some of the nuggets of insight we uncovered when it comes to the BBQ, based on reviewing conversations across 12 months of social data.

One of the most noticeable insights was that despite the increase in BBQ conversations, no brands are owning the space. This is a massive growth opportunity for challenger brands and also brands looking at adjacency marketing as a revenue opportunity.

What does this mean for brands and their social media plans?

Stand-out creative will smash through the noise on social media, but this is only one part of a well thought-out and considered plan.

What brands ultimately need to do is change consumer attitudes and behaviours; whether you are a brand taking on the bigger boys and girls, or whether you are exploring new territory.

By bringing together the social data and brand insight together, defined shopper missions can be created. For instance, what would trigger purchase? And how would a brand – whether instantly synonymous with BBQs or not – be remembered while in-store or shopping online?

Social media can support driving trial, then repeat purchase, at the consumer’s decision point, if thought through in advance.

Unlocking the BBQ occasion to deliver results

Importantly, the BBQ occasion itself provides a persuasive way to unlock purchase opportunities at shelf and online.

Occasions are a purchase driver as we shop with it in mind (be it a birthday, Christmas or BBQ). Essentially they become anchors that create behavioural loops and mental triggers that flex from occasions to shopper environments. Long lasting associations between brands and occasions are then born.

Joining the BBQ conversation offers a massive growth and revenue opportunity for the bold and brave. Seed your product in the mind of the BBQ occasion early on then reinforce this throughout your communications. Don’t forget BBQs are about people – we don’t barbecue alone – so ensure you come to the table with a conversation that will put you in the position to own that space.

Download our smokin’ hot report for brands around the BBQ here.

Latest Posts

Because the work everyone copies rarely stays effective for long. One of the easiest ways to make social look forgettable is to follow every piece of accepted advice too faithfully. That’s why we have to break the rules, occasionally That sounds slightly weird to admit in an industry built…
Read More
Meta has rolled out several new updates to its Edits video editing app, and if you create content for social media, these changes are actually pretty bloody exciting. The platform is steadily evolving into a powerful but simple editing tool for creators, offering new features that help…
Read More
D2C has a channel problem Why platform roles and better creative are replacing the old channel plan Direct to consumer brands don’t need more social channels in the plan. What’s needed is a clearer ‘platform stack’ (sorry not being nerdy, but this is the best term I can think of!).
Read More