Unilever's fitness-first campaign shows why sports platforms and influencer partnerships are reshaping how CPG brands reach male audiences.
Dove Men+Care launched a fitness challenge on Strava, the athlete-focused social platform, to promote its reformulated product line. The campaign marks a deliberate shift by parent company Unilever toward sports and influencer marketing as a primary growth channel for consumer brands.
Strava is a network built by and for endurance athletes. Its users log workouts, share routes, track performance, and engage with a tight-knit community of runners, cyclists, and outdoor enthusiasts. Unlike general social platforms, Strava users are already in a health-first mindset and actively seeking products and advice that support performance and recovery. This context matters: a fitness challenge on Strava lands with athletes who are primed to adopt body-care products marketed as performance enablers, not just hygiene.
For CPG brands, the lesson is clear. Mass-market media still works for reach, but niche communities deliver intent. Dove Men+Care could spend the same budget on Facebook ads reaching millions of men, but reaching thousands of athletes who log workouts and engage peers on Strava generates conversation, trial, and word-of-mouth within a compact, high-velocity network.
Unilever's increased emphasis on sports marketing and influencer partnerships suggests the company is betting that athlete-led campaigns and niche platform sponsorships deliver better ROI than traditional advertising. Influencers on Strava aren't necessarily mega-celebrities; they're coaches, competitive runners, and local training leaders whose followers trust their recommendations because they're earned through community presence and credibility in sport.
This approach also sidesteps algorithm changes and ad-blocking fatigue. When an athlete you follow recommends a product because they've used it, it reads as peer advice, not marketing. That distinction drives higher trial rates and repeat purchases.
If your product or service appeals to a specific community (fitness, outdoor recreation, wellness, crafts, sports), test your message on the platform where that community congregates, not just where your ad budget defaulted to last quarter. Partner with micro-influencers or community leaders in that space, not the biggest names. Tie your message to something the community cares about: a challenge, a performance metric, a seasonal event, or a problem that product solves in their context.
Strava reaches highly engaged fitness enthusiasts who share product experiences with their networks and tend to be early adopters of premium or reformulated products. Unilever is using the platform to build word-of-mouth and trial among an audience that values health and performance, not just shelf velocity.
Niche platforms deliver smaller but higher-intent audiences, so measure engagement rate, challenge participation, and post-campaign purchase lift or repeat-rate among participants rather than raw impressions. The source indicates this is part of Unilever's broader sports marketing push, suggesting they're tracking brand affinity and trial.
No, but a product hook (new formula, performance benefit, limited edition) gives fitness-focused audiences a reason to try and talk about it. Dove Men+Care used reformulation as the campaign anchor, but any credible product news or athlete endorsement can work.
Strava influencers (athletes, trainers, fitness leaders) have built authority in a specific, high-engagement community where followers are already oriented toward performance and health. Their audience is self-selected and contextually primed to care about body care, nutrition, and gear recommendations.