For Subscribers

3 Ways to Turn Your Brand into a Movement Little Spoon's Lisa Barnett has a strategy to turn customers into fans. It starts by reframing what your company stands for.

By Jason Feifer

This story appears in the December 2020 issue of BIZ Experiences. Subscribe »

Courtesy of Lisa Barnett
Lisa Barnett, cofounder and president of Little Spoon

Lisa Barnett sees a crowded future: more brands, more noise. "It's going to be expensive for you to get customers, so how do you get people to care?" she says. She is cofounder and president of Little Spoon, a DTC startup that makes meals for kids and babies, and that word care is big to her. For a brand to stand out, Barnett says, it needs to inspire passion — and that means it should treat itself like a movement. "It's rooted in a mission, and in solving and changing a reality you're not happy with," she says. Here's how to make consumers feel that there's something at stake:

Related: 5 Tips for BIZ Experiencess Looking to Create a Movement

1. Identify an enemy.

Every movement has one. Brands should, too — whether it's a competitor, an industry, or a paradigm. When Little Spoon launched, for example, it did so with the tagline "No more old baby food." "You don't want people to have to guess what you stand for," Barnett says, "so an enemy is a great way to help people visualize this problem." By tackling someone's enemy, you're their champion.

2. Release a manifesto.

Promote your ideas as much as your products. You can do it with an essay on your own site or an op-ed somewhere else. Lululemon is a classic example. It launched with a manifesto that included phrases such as "Friends are more important than money," then printed them on tote bags. "It was a way for people to start to indoctrinate into the philosophy of that brand," Barnett says.

Related: Why Your Brand Plan Is More Important Than Your Business Plan

3. Build an on-ramp.

Superfans aren't created; they're cultivated. "Give people little, easy ways to participate, and then you gradually get them further and further up the curve," Barnett says. Little Spoon, for example, launched an online platform called "Is This Normal?," where parents can get their burning questions answered. The more opportunities you create for engagement, the more people feel attached…and start telling others. "Over time, that's your marketing channel," she says. "These people are out there advocating for you. And that's the goal."

Jason Feifer

BIZ Experiences Staff

Editor in Chief

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of BIZ Experiences magazine and host of the podcast Problem Solvers. Outside of BIZ Experiences, he writes the newsletter One Thing Better, which each week gives you one better way to build a career or company you love. He is also a startup advisor, keynote speaker, book author, and nonstop optimism machine.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Making a Change

What It Takes to Go From Dead Broke to 6 Figures in 6 Months

Every change we need to make to prosper is within ourselves.

Science & Technology

OpenAI's Latest Move Is a Game Changer — Here's How Smart Solopreneurs Are Turning It Into Profit

OpenAI's latest AI tool acts like a full-time assistant, helping solopreneurs save time, find leads and grow their business without hiring.

Business Solutions

Boost Team Productivity and Security With Windows 11 Pro, Now $15 for Life

Ideal for BIZ Experiencess and small-business owners who are looking to streamline their PC setup.

Science & Technology

AI Isn't Plug-and-Play — You Need a Strategy. Here's Your Guide to Building One.

Don't just "add AI" — build a strategy. This guide helps founders avoid common pitfalls and create a step-by-step roadmap to harness real value from AI.

Starting a Business

I Built a $20 Million Company by Age 22 While Still in College. Here's How I Did It and What I Learned Along the Way.

Wealth-building in your early twenties isn't about playing it safe; it's about exploiting the one time in life when having nothing to lose gives you everything to gain.