UK · US · India | Oct 2024 – Apr 2025
D2C health & wellness brands across US, UK, and India.
What the data tells us — fast.
Authentic creator-style content layered with clinical credibility is the dominant creative formula. Pure polish or pure testimonial both underperform alone.
Facebook/Instagram is the primary paid channel globally. TikTok accelerating in US & India. YouTube is severely underinvested across all three markets.
US = aspirational + clinical. UK = evidence-based + stricter. India = functional value + local ingredients. One creative won't work across all three.
Demos outperform static and UGC. First 3 seconds of video are decisive. Carousels at 2.2% are almost ignored despite strong multi-benefit storytelling potential.
Quiz-to-product funnels appear in just 1.4% of creatives despite clear consumer demand for personalised health. Hims, Thesis, and Gainful lead — but the white space across all three markets is enormous.
Relative activity across Meta, TikTok, Google, YouTube, and Influencer by market.
What this tells you: Meta is the runaway leader in all three markets — especially US and UK. TikTok is nearly as strong as Meta in the US and growing fast in India via Reels. YouTube sits at the bottom across all markets — a clear gap for brands willing to invest in long-form education content.
| Platform | US | UK | India | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta (FB/IG) | High | High | Medium | ↑ Dominant; hybrid UGC shift Oct 2024 |
| TikTok / Reels | High | Medium | Medium | ↑ Rising; TikTok Shop emerging |
| Google Search / PMax | Medium | Medium | Low | → Stable; intent-driven secondary |
| YouTube | Low | Low | Low | ↓ Underinvested everywhere |
| Influencer | Medium | Medium | Medium | → Macro/expert (US), Science (UK), Micro (India) |
Format share from 500-ad analysis. US/UK-heavy; India directional.
What this tells you: Product demos dominate globally at 44.2% — India skews even higher at ~52%, reflecting a preference for show-don't-tell content. The UK leans more on single static images with clinical claims. Carousel (2.2%) and quiz formats (1.4%) are almost absent — both are significant opportunities no brand has meaningfully claimed.
| Format | Share | US | UK | India | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product Demo Video | 44.2% | ↑ High | ↑ High | ↑ Very High | Dominant |
| Single Image (Static) | 35.8% | → Stable | ↑ High | → Stable | Stable |
| UGC / Short Video | 32.6% | ↑ Rising | ↑ Rising | ↑ Rising | Growing |
| Hybrid UGC + Polished | ~21% | ↑ Rising | ↑ Rising | ↑ Rising | Fastest Growing |
| Animation / Education | ~8% | → | ↑ Strong | → | Niche |
| Carousel | 2.2% | ↓ Rare | ↓ Rare | ↓ Rare | Underused |
| Quiz / Personalisation | 1.4% | ↑ Opp. | ↑ Opp. | ↑ Big Opp. | Untapped |
| Before/After Meme | 1.2% | ↓ Fatigued | ↓ Fatigued | ↓ | Avoid |
The 10 patterns that drive performance across markets.
"X g protein… 20% off." Hard numbers anchor value. Strongest in US/UK subscription tiers.
Universal"Clinically tested… high-performance morning routine." Clinical credibility paired with aspiration.
US · UKRelatable hook, product as solution, UGC result close. Backbone of all short-form video.
Short-Form"1M+ customers", star ratings, transformations. Layered heavily by Hims & Hers, AG1.
Universal"Clean, vegan, no fillers." Ritual and Seed lead. Strong with label-reading consumers.
US · UK PremiumClinical voiceover, study citations, "clinically researched" badges. Builds category trust.
Gut · Brain · Collagen"Confidence", "transform", "wake refreshed." US-led; emotional triggers rising everywhere.
US Lead"Just ₹X per day." Bundle deals. Critical in India; secondary in US/UK.
India LeadNew Year gut/sleep/energy hooks; Valentine's for sexual wellness (Hims). Timing amplifies everything.
Seasonal"Built for you." Only 1.4% usage. Hims, Thesis, Gainful lead. Biggest white space across all markets.
⚡ Big OpportunityBrand activity, creative patterns, and market-specific signals.
Clinical + aspirational · Subscription funnels · Sexual health & gut niches
| Brand | Activity | Format | Platform | Message |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hims & Hers | High | Static + Short Video | Meta | Clinical + Social Proof ("1M+ customers") |
| AG1 | High | Demo Video | Meta | Aspiration + Routine ("one scoop morning") |
| Ritual | Med-High | Static + Hybrid | Meta | Science + Lifestyle ("clean, vegan, real science") |
| Seed Health | Med-High | Animation + Static | Meta | Clinical Gut ("24 strains, clinically tested") |
| Thesis / Gainful | Medium | UGC + Quiz | Meta | Personalisation ("built for you") |
| Noom | Medium | Short Video | Meta | Psychology-based weight/wellness |
| Care/of (Bayer) | Low | Legacy/Organic | — | Post-acquisition; limited paid activity observed |
Static pill + before/after with "Why Testosterone by Hims? Just one pill." Consistent sexual health funnel with clinical trust signals and subscription architecture.
Minimalist demo tying morning scoop to daily performance routine. Expert voiceover + subscription CTA. Benchmark execution in the 500-ad analysis.
Evidence-based · Brain & gut health · ASA-compliant clinical tone
| Brand | Activity | Format | Platform | Message |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huel | High | Demo Video + Image | Meta | Functional + Value ("ready in minutes, $3.95") |
| Ancient + Brave | Medium | Static / Video | Meta GB | Clinical + Women's ("True Collagen, clinically researched") |
| Zoe | Medium | Static / Video | Meta | Science gut ("30+ plants, world-leading scientists") |
| Heights / Form / Myvitamins | Medium | Static + UGC | Meta | Brain/Nutrition — quantified + lifestyle |
| Innermost / Bare Biology / Nourished | Low | Static / Niche | Meta | Brain/Sleep/Collagen — science + transparency |
Routine-building demos with everyday-user UGC. "Ready in minutes" + explicit price point. The clearest UK performance creative template.
"30+ plant gut supplement… world-leading scientists." Product shot + clinical claim + subscription funnel. Exemplifies UK's evidence-first, ASA-compliant tone.
Value + protein · Local ingredients · Emerging paid scale
| Brand | Activity | Category | Primary Message |
|---|---|---|---|
| MuscleBlaze | Medium | Protein / Sports | Functional + value; protein quantity anchors |
| Traya Health | Medium | Hair Health | Local ingredient + clinical; problem → solution UGC |
| The Whole Truth Foods | Medium | Nutrition / Protein | Radical ingredient transparency; "nothing to hide" |
| Oziva (HUL) | Low–Med | Women's Nutrition | Plant-based lifestyle; shifting post-acquisition |
| Wellbeing / Setu / Kapiva / Fast&Up | Low–Med | Gut / Immunity / Ayurvedic | Local ingredients + affordability + functional demos |
⚠️ Limited granular ad-library data for India in this period — directional estimates only. DATA NEEDED for specifics.
Radical transparency: every ingredient shown, "nothing to hide." Price-anchored bundles. Differentiated positioning vs incumbent brands.
Problem → solution UGC for hair health with Ayurvedic credibility. Local trust signals. Strong subscription funnel candidate.
First-3-second hook types and saturation by market.
| Hook Type | US | UK | India | Saturation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Problem Statement | ↑ High | ↑ High | ↑ High | Medium |
| Demo Open | ↑ High | ↑ High | ↑ Very High | High |
| Statistic / Claim | ↑ High | ↑ High | → Med | Medium |
| Pattern Interrupt | → Med | → Low | → Med | Low |
| Expert Authority | → Med | ↑ High | → Low | Low |
| Price / Value Reveal | → Low | → Low | ↑ High | Low–Med |
| Emotional Cold Open | ↑ Rising | → Stable | → Low | Low |
The winning arc: Hook → Problem → Solution → Result → CTA. Demo opens dominate because they establish relevance immediately. India's price-reveal hook is a unique market differentiator with no equivalent in US/UK creative.
What works on each platform, by market — 9 combinations.
Key differences and shared patterns across US, UK, and India at a glance.
| Dimension | 🇺🇸 United States | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | 🇮🇳 India |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dominant Format | UGC Video / Image Hybrid | Clinical Static + UGC | Functional Demo |
| Top Platform | Meta + TikTok (rising) | Meta dominant | Meta + Reels |
| Primary Message | Clinical + Personalisation | Science + Brain/Gut | Value + Protein |
| Price Strategy | Premium subscription + BOGO | Premium + first-order off | Explicit affordability + bundles |
| Regulatory Tone | FTC: outcome-oriented + disclaimers | ASA: strict evidence + "supports" | ASCI: similar + local ingredient nods |
| Creator Type | Macro / expert hybrid | Science / wellness expert | Micro / local fitness |
| Leading Category | Gut / Sexual / Nootropics | Brain / Gut / Collagen | Protein / Hair / Immunity |
| Emotional Split | 60/40 (functional + rising emotional) | 70/30 (functional) | 75/25 (strongly functional) |
| Creative Fatigue | High (static claims) | Medium | Low — emerging scale |
| Personalisation Use | Low but leading | Very Low | Very Low — biggest opportunity |
| YouTube Investment | Low — opportunity | Low — opportunity | Very Low — major opportunity |
The big picture: All three markets converge on hybrid UGC + science framing on Meta — but tone, economics, and regulation diverge sharply. The single largest untapped lever across all markets is personalisation funnels at just 1.4% usage. YouTube is underinvested everywhere. India has the lowest creative fatigue — and the most room to grow.
What to pursue vs what to avoid — per market.
🇺🇸 United States
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
🇮🇳 India
Six standout brands — two per market.
The benchmark for clinical D2C health ads. "1M+ customers", "just one pill" — social proof at scale with accessible clinical language. Every CTA drives a consultation funnel. Architecture others in the space should study.
The gold standard of routine-integration supplement marketing. Minimalist demo, expert voiceover, "one scoop morning ritual." Subscription CTA is aggressive but natural. Benchmark execution in the 500-ad analysis.
UK's clearest D2C paid creative benchmark. Routine-building demos with everyday-user UGC. "High-protein complete meal, ready in minutes, $3.95." Explicit price point reduces friction. Bridges premium and value masterfully.
Award-winning collagen brand. "True Collagen… clinically researched" — ASA-navigant while delivering strong functional claims. Product + lifestyle imagery on Meta GB campaigns. Premium positioning with rigorous evidence standards.
India's most differentiated supplement creative: radical ingredient transparency. Every label shown, "nothing to hide." Price-anchored bundles convert price-sensitive consumers. Blueprint for competing on values rather than just price.
Hair health brand combining Ayurvedic ingredients with modern clinical credibility. Problem → solution → result UGC in a high-emotional-stakes category. Strong subscription funnel potential. A model for localising clinical trust for Indian consumers.
Patterns of wasted spend, missed signals, and creative decisions that cost brands across all three markets.
Brands took genuine creator content and added heavy post-production — colour grading, graphic overlays, brand watermarks — stripping out the rawness that made it convert. Audiences on TikTok and Reels can smell a corporate UGC ad instantly. The hybrid format works because it looks authentic, not because it looks expensive.
💸 Wasted SpendThe "ever feel tired all the time?" hook worked — then every brand in every category used it. Creative fatigue hit hardest in the US market where ad frequency is highest. Brands that didn't rotate hook variants saw CPMs spike and CTRs collapse. Hook libraries, not single hooks, are what scale.
💸 CPM InflationWhen every supplement brand in the category claims "clinically tested" or "scientifically formulated" without specificity, the claim becomes wallpaper. Seed and Zoe showed the right path: name the study, cite the strains, show the mechanism. Vague clinical language now signals low credibility, not high trust.
⚠️ Missed SignalMost brands optimise for the 3-second hook. The actual battleground is the first half-second before the thumb scrolls. Brands that started with motion, a face, or a visual problem in frame zero outperformed those that opened with a logo, a packshot, or black screen. The thumb doesn't wait.
💸 Lost ImpressionsUS supplement brands — especially in the nootropics and gut health categories — consistently opened ads with product shots and brand names rather than anchoring in the consumer problem. Hims cracked this early: lead with the embarrassing truth ("Low T is more common than you think"), then introduce the product. Brands that skipped this paid in thumbstops.
⚠️ Conversion LossNearly every US health brand pushed subscription CTAs while their post-click experience — landing page, onboarding, email flows — was built for one-time purchases. High subscription click rates, poor activation rates. The creative promised a routine. The funnel delivered a checkout page.
💸 Revenue LeakMultiple UK supplement brands ran US-originated creatives with outcome-specific claims ("lose 10 lbs", "regrow hair in 60 days") that passed FTC scrutiny but violated ASA guidance. The result: takedowns, brand trust damage, and the cost of reshooting with "supports" language. Market localisation isn't just translation — it's regulatory architecture.
🚨 Regulatory RiskUK audiences — particularly in the brain health and collagen categories — skew more sceptical of wellness claims than US counterparts. Brands that relied on aspirational lifestyle imagery without substantiation saw lower engagement and higher comment scepticism. The UK consumer wants the study, not just the story.
⚠️ Trust GapDespite over 60% of India's internet users preferring vernacular content, the majority of health supplement brands ran English-only paid creative. The brands that tested Hindi and regional-language variants — even simple dubbed audio over existing video — saw meaningfully higher engagement rates in Tier 2 and 3 cities, which represent the fastest-growing protein supplement buyer segment.
⚠️ Audience MissSeveral India-focused brands attempted to import Western premium supplement positioning — clean design, minimalist copy, no price mention — into a market where price sensitivity is a primary purchase driver. Without a per-day cost breakdown or value comparison anchor ("less than your daily chai"), premium signals read as inaccessible, not aspirational.
💸 Conversion FailureMarket-specific 90-day playbooks — what to do now, what to build next, and what to cut.
Priority: Deepen personalisation · Diversify off Meta · Refresh fatigued formats
Priority: Evidence depth · YouTube investment · ASA compliance architecture
Priority: Vernacular at scale · Price anchoring · Micro-creator activation
What the top-performing D2C health brands consistently do that the average brands don't.
The best brands — AG1, Huel, Hims — don't advertise a product. They advertise a slot in your day. "One scoop every morning." "Ready in minutes." "Just one pill." The creative positions the product as already part of the consumer's life, not something they're being asked to add to it. Average brands show what the product is. The best brands show what your life looks like with it.
AG1's entire creative library frames the product around the morning routine — not ingredients, not benefits, not even taste. The routine IS the product.
Top brands use a deliberate proof architecture: clinical data establishes category credibility, expert voiceover builds authority, UGC testimonials make it personal, and social proof numbers ("1M+ customers") remove purchase risk. Average brands use one proof type repeatedly — usually social proof — which fatigues quickly. The best layer different types across the funnel at each stage.
Seed Health uses animation (mechanism), then UGC (social proof), then a clinical badge (authority) — all in one creative. Three distinct proof layers in 30 seconds.
The worst-performing H&W ads open with the brand or the product. The best-performing ones open with a truth about the person watching. "You're not lazy. Your gut microbiome is." "Testosterone starts declining at 30." These hooks work because the viewer's brain says "that's me" before they realise they're watching an ad. The hook earns the pitch — the pitch doesn't replace the hook.
Hims leads with the uncomfortable truth about hair loss or low testosterone before ever naming the product. The viewer is already nodding before the brand appears.
Average brands produce a campaign (3–5 assets), run it, evaluate it, repeat on a quarterly cycle. Top-performing brands run a continuous creative testing machine — new hooks weekly, format variants monthly, new proof types quarterly. The result is a creative library that compounds: winners stay in rotation, losers get retired fast, and learning accumulates. Their cost per acquisition drops over time while others' rises.
The 500-ad analysis found that the brands with the most total ads in rotation (AG1, Hims) also had the lowest creative fatigue scores — because they never stopped testing.
This is the pattern that most multi-market brands fail. The top performers understand that US consumers respond to aspirational permission ("you deserve to feel good"), UK consumers respond to evidence authority ("here's what the research shows"), and Indian consumers respond to practical value ("this is exactly what you get and what it costs"). The same product needs three distinct emotional postures — not three translations of the same ad. Brands that localise at this depth — not just language but emotional register — consistently outperform those that adapt the copy and leave the feeling the same.
Huel's UK creative is UGC-practical ("meal in minutes, £X"). A hypothetical US version of the same product would lean harder on performance identity — "fuel for people who don't stop." Same product. Different emotional contract.
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