Quest Nutrition grew by 57,000% in 3 years.
Then we made a colossal mistake.
Have you ever been riding high on success, feeling invincible, only to have reality come crashing down around you?
Maybe you've expanded your business into a new area, certain that your current customers would follow – only to find crickets and mounting costs instead of eager buyers?
If you've ever faced a business setback that left you questioning everything you thought you knew, you're not alone. Today, I'm going to share a painfully real case study from my Quest days, that will save you from making the same expensive mistakes.
Here’s how we failed hard and what you can learn from it.
Quest Nutrition was born on the back of a mindset, and we wanted our customers to know that too.
So we launched an apparel lifestyle brand around the relentless pursuit of maximizing your human potential. The brand was aggressive and cool.
So why haven’t you ever heard of it?
Because we shut it down. It failed. Hard.
Why? Because Quest Nutrition was a brand built on completely different things.
Quest Nutrition was about junk food that happened to be good for you. It was a health-conscious food brand largely for people who wanted to lose weight.
So Quest Apparel didn’t resonate with our customers at all.
What Quest meant to me as a founder wasn’t what it meant to the consumer. And only the consumer matters.
It suddenly became clear to me that Quest launching a clothing company was like Quaker Oats launching a clothing company. You may love Quaker Oats, but do you want to buy an upscale $120 henley made by them?
No. That’s just not what you have in your head when you think of them.
Here’s how you can be wise and learn from my mistakes…
Despite our best intentions, Quest Apparel failed. Hard. Here's why:
The disconnect was jarring for our customers.
We created clothing for the wrong body types.
Establish Your Brand's Core Identity
Lesson: Any new venture should align with your established brand identity.
Application: Before launching a new product, explicitly map out how it aligns with your core brand values and customer perception.
Truly Understand Your Audience
Lesson: The people promoting your brand might not be the same as those buying your products.
Application: Conduct thorough market research. Don't just assume - know who your customers are and what they want.
Create 'Straight Lines' in Your Marketing
Lesson: There should be a clear, logical path from your content to your product.
Application: Before launching a product, ensure you can create content that naturally leads to that product. If you can't see that straight line, reconsider your approach.
Pave New Lanes Before Changing Direction
Lesson: Brand goodwill doesn't automatically transfer to new products or categories.
Application: If venturing into a new area, start by creating content to build the right audience first. Test the waters before diving in with a full product launch.
Let's talk numbers. I don’t remember the exact numbers, but I can tell you that this venture cost us millions. We invested heavily in:
All of this ended up being sunk cost when we had to shut down the operation.
In hindsight, here's what we should have done:
If you stay true to your brand’s core, understand your audience, create straight lines, and always build the audience before you create the product, you’ll be able to evolve your business. But if you don’t do that, you’re going to burn a lot of money.
Take it from someone who’s burned millions so you don’t have to.
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