Aptly named D2C brand Brandless—an online purveyor of minimalist grocery, wellness and home goods—has oriented its brand around the rise of digital-first shoppers who prefer products that include fewer, more natural ingredients. These shoppers have an evolving view of brands and don’t harbor any particular affinity for household names they grew up with.
“Consumer mindset is shifting, and people are not anti-brand. They’re leaning more toward anti-the-way-it-used-to-be,” said Aaron Magness, CMO of Brandless.
What might appear to be a small aperture in brand sentiment is widening, and it’s creating new opportunities for nontraditional private labels to emerge. “Private labels used to signify cheaper, lower-quality ingredients,” Lipsman said. “Today, brandless brands are flipping that notion on its head and providing what many perceive as better quality while maintaining good value.”
In August 2019, Target introduced Good & Gather, a new food and beverage store brand, as part of the company’s revamped private-label strategy. “The idea behind the brand is simple: great food made for real life,” Target CEO Brian Cornell said on the company’s Q3 2019 earnings call. “Good & Gather incorporates simple, high-quality ingredients without any artificial flavors, synthetic colors, artificial sweeteners or high-fructose corn syrup.” The brand has received a positive reception from customers and appears to have contributed to Target’s strong bottom-line performance in Q3.
“For the retailer, it’s a very opportunistic move—good from a financial standpoint to be able to drive volume through an owned brand,” said Jason Young, chief marketing and media officer at retail marketing tech provider Quotient Technology. “Certain commoditized categories across segments with high price sensitivity, that’s where the vulnerability is going to exist.”