Subscription Box News: Period Boxes Capture The Attention Of Women Consumers
March 12, 2019
It’s been well-documented that direct-to-consumer (DTC) and subscription services are changing the way consumers shop. Businesses from car companies to toy manufacturers are angling for innovative ways to tap into the growing subscription sales model. A significant chapter in the DTC story is the rise of subscription boxes, and one of the success stories in this sector includes PMS and period boxes.
Creating Authentic Connections May Be An Effective Strategy For Period Boxes
Period boxes, almost all developed by women-led companies, are customizable and personal. Their products, usually tampons, pads and small extras, are necessary, and their brands have helped create conversation around what some consider taboo subjects. One of the popular brand leaders in period boxes is LOLA. A recent TechCrunch article noted, “Where LOLA may have some leverage, however, is encouraging more open discussions about female reproductive health, and engaging its customers through social media. The startup touts six times the number of Instagram followers compared with mainstream brands.”
Marketers know Millennials and younger generations like brands that align with their beliefs and create personal, authentic connections. Period boxes are likely resonating with those buyers by creating relationships, while offering convenience and meeting a demand.
Customized, Fun And Easy To Order Exemplifies What Makes Many Period Boxes Appealing To Consumers
Women need feminine hygiene products, and they need them every month. But the consumers buying feminine hygiene products include a mix of age groups with personal preferences and different interests in style, substance and cost — all of which creates customization and brand loyalty opportunities. Some of the following period boxes share common approaches to moving their products, while also offering their own specialty items and branding.
Femly Box Was Founded By An Entrepreneur Interested In Safe, Organic Products
Femly was launched in 2016 by Baltimore entrepreneur Arion Long after she experienced health issues that led her to investigate the benefits of 100% organic feminine hygiene products. Femly’s products are all 100% organic cotton. Providing subscription-based products consumers can feel good about using, because it’s organic, woman-owned or gives back to the community is a common motivator for the founders of period boxes.
Blume Provides Empowering And Positive Messaging For Young Women And Teens
Blume is a fairly straightforward option. Pick the Blume-branded items that work the best, maybe throw in a few extra goodies, and the subscription is set. In addition to subscriptions, Blume also sells their branded products in their online store for individual sale. The company messaging is about empowering women and skews toward teenagers and younger women, creating a niche within a niche. Betty in the U.K. is also geared toward teens, offering advice, articles and pro-period real talk.
LOLA Is A Leader In The Period Box Marketplace Recently Securing A Significant Investment
One of the more well-known leaders in the period box business, LOLA’s ads blanket social media, and their product branding and marketing is chic and unfussy. LOLA recently raised an additional $24 million in funding, and they’ve partnered with three different charities to donate 100,000 feminine hygiene products to women in need across the country.
Kali Curates A Special Box For Teens And Works With Girl-Focused Charities
Kali is one of the menstrual subscription programs that has a curated box specifically for teens. The box can be customized to suit the needs or comfort of the girl in mind, and it also comes with a cute surprise, like a make-up tote or wellness gift. Kali partnered with Girl Up, the United Nations FoundationĀ“s adolescent girl campaign, donating a portion of their sales from the teen boxes to the initiative.
RWPP Offers A Variety Of PMS-Friendly Products From Brand Partners
Not every box is just feminine hygiene products. RWPP partners with other brands to bring a full-service box that includes craveable snacks, fun surprise gifts, two pairs of underwear each month and tampons and pads. These are sometimes called PMS boxes. A quick customer survey allows RWPP to ascertain what the subscriber might like, including the delivery frequency and size of box.
Women are powerful and influential consumers and entrepreneurs. They are staking a claim in the start-up world, offering choice and purchasing decisions that may not be readily available in the traditional retail space. Period box subscriptions are one of many ways the female entrepreneur influence is being exercised, and the future of this disruptive business model will depend on scaling interest and product growth moving forward.
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About the Author
Sarah Cavill is a Marketing Communications Writer at Digital Media Solutions (DMS), the fastest-growing independent digital performance marketing company. DMS helps its clients accelerate growth by deploying diversified and data-driven customer acquisition solutions that deliver scalable, sustainable and measurable marketing results. DMS performance marketing solutions connect the right consumers with the right offers at the right time to achieve the marketing objectives of our clients. DMS is continually innovating to provide new and emerging media and technology solutions that minimize waste and maximize results across the most competitive industries. Since its inception, DMS has demonstrated incredible year-over-year growth which has earned recognition on the Inc. 5000 list in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018.
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Content retrieved from: insights.digitalmediasolutions.com….