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running a business means juggling a lot of moving parts. And when your communication tools can't keep up, things start to slip. Missed calls, slow replies, scattered conversations. They're not just frustrating, they're lost opportunities and revenue left on the table. That's where Quo comes in. Spelled Quo, Quo is the number one rated business phone system on G2, trusted by over 90,000 businesses. One shared business number for calls and texts so every conversation stays visible, organized and accountable. It works from an app or computer. You can keep your existing number, add teammates and sync your CRM, letting you scale without adding complexity. And with built in AI, Quo logs calls, summarizes conversations and flags next steps even after hours Stop missing customers. Stop leaving revenue on the table. Try Quo Free and get 20% off your first six months at Quo.com tech. That's Quashuo.com tech quo no missed calls, no missed customers
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Brandon Goodman
My boss asked results so I opened
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my dashboard for the only positive sounding metric I had.
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Brandon Goodman
I'm proud of the infrastructure that Unilever has built up and their commitment to measurement. The saying that we like to lean on is that we want to be the most outcome driven advertiser in the industry. And a lot of that is not measurement theater. There's far too many metrics to track within the media space. You can get lost. I find that there's always a way to tell a great story when it comes to your media deployment. But at the end of the day, the question that you need to answer is whether or not there's a true commercial impact and we need to hold our media accountable for business delivery and we need to use media, the measurement of media, to make better business decisions.
Sarah Hofstetter
Welcome to today's episode of Brave Commerce. I'm Sarah Hofstetter.
Rachel Tippograph
And I'm Rachel Tippograph. And this is a show that talks about what's relevant in commerce for the world's biggest brands. Sarah, we haven't spent that much time talking about one of your new ventures, 37 ARC.
Sarah Hofstetter
Oh, am I getting a plug? This is so exciting.
Rachel Tippograph
You're getting a plug. I'm giving you a plug.
Sarah Hofstetter
Earn media, baby.
Rachel Tippograph
So remind everyone what 37 arc is.
Sarah Hofstetter
37 arc is workflow intelligence for marketing. So imagine all of the things that gunk up your ability to get things done as a marketer. You're probably spending more time on project management than you are on actually being a marketer. You're waiting for legal to come back to you with rounds and rounds of reviews. The entire flow of how marketing works is just made up of a bunch of invisible workflows that gunk you up. This is AI that helps understand where you're gunked up and helps rewire it so that you're moving better, faster, cheaper relative to your competition and driving business results and optimizations much, much, much faster. But in short, we make it easier for marketers to do marketing.
Rachel Tippograph
So in your first few months of getting this off the ground, you've started to do projects with a bunch of big companies. And what observations have you made in terms of where do you think humans should still be working within marketing?
Sarah Hofstetter
Creative, full stop.
Rachel Tippograph
Anything else?
Sarah Hofstetter
Oh, absolutely. The number one thing that people talk about when they're like, oh, AI, AI, they're going to take my creative job or we're going to AI all of our creative. And they talk about all of the pilots that they have going on in the creative realm. And I'm just like, man. So the part that, like, has so much taste associated with it and so much nuance associated with it, that's the thing you're going to take away. Whereas there's so many kind of rote components of the way you do work. And that's the thing you don't want to give up. Was just a surprising. It seemed antithetical to me that humans can keep pushing projects along, but AI can fix our dynamic creative problem. And the answer is, I think AI actually can fix the process. But I don't think we're at the point, at least not here in the first half of 2026, ready to surrender our creative to AI.
Rachel Tippograph
Any other big thing that you think humans should own?
Sarah Hofstetter
I think humans should own strategy. The way you go about your partnerships are so critical, very rarely are you only buying a piece of tech or tools so often you're making choices about who you're working with and their ability and the trust factor between that. All different elements of like credibility, reliability, self orientation. I mean we're not just buying spots and dots here. We're trying to figure out how to make the right choices. And an algorithm will help, but first you gotta understand where you are. You gotta look before you leave, you know.
Rachel Tippograph
Well, the reason why I'm giving Sarah this moment of publicity for 37 ARC is we're about to bring.
Sarah Hofstetter
We're both, by the way.
Rachel Tippograph
Yeah, this is totally unplanned.
Sarah Hofstetter
When Rachel starts every episode, I have no idea what question she is going to ask me. She starts and I am completely caught off guard. I have no idea where she's going to go with this. And so I got to roll with it. So I appreciate the plug, but I did not ask for it.
Rachel Tippograph
The intros and outros are completely raw, folks. The reason why I teed it up this way is that we're about to bring on Brandon Goodman at Unilever who is playing a major role in their content and media supply chain. And when you listen to him, he pretty much builds a business case as to why humans are still needed in the world of creative. So let's hear Brandon's take on all things creative, media and AI. Today we are very excited to have Brandon Goodman, the head of media and marketing capabilities for beauty and well being in the US at Unilever. Hello, Brandon.
Brandon Goodman
Hello. Thank you so much for having me. I'm honored.
Rachel Tippograph
Absolutely. Well, you're definitely at the center of Unilever's growth. There's been so much talk around everything that they're doing around the beauty and well being space. But also there's been a tremendous focus at Unilever, I think for generations on media as a vehicle to help build brand and drive growth. When we've been following Unilever over the past, I would say two, maybe three years, Unilever has been very public about being social first, which might mean different things to different brands. So if you can one, define what does it mean for Unilever to be social first and two, why as a company are we giving that phrase so much airtime publicly?
Brandon Goodman
Yes, social first is definitely the buzzword of the generation within the walls of Unilever and I think it's one that I strongly believe in. It's not a new phrase. It's not like we woke up one day and we're like hey, what's this social media thing? Should we be on it? It's actually an adoption of the recognition of this transition from the follower graph to to the interest graph and how that interest graph has influenced what consumers expectations are on how brands communicate with them. And what I mean by that, you've got this old model, you'd open up social. The content that you'd be exposed to is based off of who you were following to the new model influenced by TikTok where you're subject to the interest graph, right? You are subject to content that you deem or the model assumes is interesting to you. And that algorithmic shift has drastically changed our marketing philosophy and our media philosophy. And at the center of that marketing philosophy is a recognition on how to feed that new algorithm and how to feed it as content. Ultimately we want to be interesting. We want that algorithm to make sure that we find the cohorts that find our communications interesting. And that's ultimately what we mean by social. First it's appeasing this new algorithm reality. What it doesn't mean is a unstrategic lean towards investing in social disproportionate attention to that channel. This creative reality has shifted the creative norms of all of the other channels across our comms, think retail media, think display, think video. There's a lot of creative learnings that we get from how we activate within this new interest graph reality and it absolutely is influencing the way that we're thinking about communicating across all the channels.
Sarah Hofstetter
We're big supporters, makes a ton of sense, especially in the spaces that you play. It's a very different approach to classic. And when I say classic I am just gonna not even try to be nice about it. Old school CPG marketing, this whole working non working. In order for this social thing to work, you actually have to create a whole bunch of dynamic personalized content at scale. So you go from having these big campaigns with like matching luggage to a very different kind of way of doing that. So in your role in particular, what do you stop doing in order to start making space for that? And how do you think even about how the work flows versus the way it used to?
Brandon Goodman
Yes, I think there's this firm commitment that we need to be less all in on a big creative idea, or at least the creative expression of a big idea. Less of that high risk, high reward old school model as you put it, where the idea translates to a big super shoot, a big commitment to some sort of studio shoot where we take a high fidelity creative and distribute it across all the channels and hope that it sticks to one where we need to commit to higher volume as well as variety of creatives that still express the underlying idea behind the brand's campaign thinking so that we can find the right expression of it. And I think the underlying idea of your question is like operationally, how do you do this? Because we have been set up in past to work with our agency partners and the studios that we work with to get that really polished creative out the door. And so this idea of content supply chain that is the routes that we can tap into to create higher volume and higher variety of creative is an important component as well as the operational infrastructure. Just from a behavioral standpoint of how do you deploy a lot of creative measure it, ask the basic question on what's working, why, why not? And be able to be agile in going back to the drawing board and deploy more of that creative. And so I'm pretty proud of Unilever. Over the last few years, as we've committed to this idea of social first marketing is, we've committed to shifting those two things. Standing up the appropriate content supply chain to unlock agility for our marketers, but also standing up the marketing practice of having those cycles and the measurement infrastructure to get creative at the door and ask what's working and what's not and why so that we can continuously tap back into that content supply chain to once again appease that algorithmic reality that is hungry for more content volume and content variety.
LinkedIn Advertising Announcer
Are your ad campaigns lighting up the dashboard but not the pipeline? That's bullspend and marketers are calling it out in dashboard confessions.
Brandon Goodman
My boss asked for results so I opened my dashboard for the only positive
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sounding metric I had.
Brandon Goodman
Impressions.
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Quo Business Phone System Announcer
Running a Business means juggling a lot of moving parts. And when your communication tools can't keep up, things start to slip. Missed calls, slow replies, scattered conversations. They're not just frustrating, they're lost opportunities and revenue left on the table. That's where Quo comes in. Spelled Quo, Quo is the one rated business phone system on G2 trusted by over 90,000 businesses. One shared business number for calls and texts so every conversation stays visible, organized and accountable. It works from an app or computer. You can keep your existing number, add teammates and sync your CRM, letting you scale without adding complexity. And with built in AI, Quo logs calls, summarizes conversations and flags next steps. Even after hours. Stop missing customers. Stop leaving revenue on the table. Try quo free and get 20% off your first six months at quo.comtech that's quo.comtech quo no missed calls, no missed customers.
Thomson Reuters Announcer
This podcast is brought to you by Thomson Reuters. The best don't just do their work. They change what's possible. Cases won, audits completed, jobs saved. Behind every one of those moments is a professional who needed to get it right and did. Thomson Reuters builds the technology that sharpens insights, speeds up decision making and powers the outcomes that matter. So when professionals act, the impact is felt by everyone. Be a changemaker visit tr.com changemakers can
Rachel Tippograph
you tell us a little bit more about this supply chain? Like without giving away the secret sauce, but what is automated? Where are you working with humans? All that jazz?
Brandon Goodman
Yeah, it's a mix, right? I think there's no perfect route for any piece of creative. It really takes some human thinking around. Okay, if this is what's working and we need to make more of that, which route is the appropriate one? And there are many. There are creator networks that you could tap into. For brandsay creative, there's still going back to the studio, which is still an important component of a mass brand's content supply chain. There's working with influencers and there's having direct relationships with creatives that might be closer to your day to day operations or even in house. And every single scenario stresses the system. To ask which one makes most sense. Automation is a unique word in the world of creative because I think everyone's really hungry to understand automation and its role in the content supply chain. What I would say is automation is far more useful as what I've seen so far. And I'm not making this definitive statement that it's always going to be the case moving forward, but less so useful in content origination and more so around the adaptation and Remixing and the help to disperse all of this wonderful creative to the copious amounts of channels that we, we operate within. People don't realize it, but even just having one creative asset transforms into hundreds of permutations of that creative being dispersed for be that, you know, the retail media placements or the national or social placements and that exercise of fitting a creative unit into all of those different placements is, is a very demanding one. And there's awesome ways to automate that process and alleviate some of the resource attention to, to the wonderful process of just being creative and thinking of that baseline creative that's working.
Thomson Reuters Announcer
Right.
Brandon Goodman
The creative remixing part that automation helps quite a bit within. But then I would say the measurement ecosystem is one that benefits from automation. Measuring creative is this ambiguous space and it's not perfect yet, but there's a lot of signals out there that we have that we like to use automation to help us surface quickly. So it might not directly answer why a creative is working or not, but it at least points your eyes in the direction to say something is working over here. Now you can bring the human element into it and discuss what you're seeing, what you're observing.
Rachel Tippograph
So on the measurement front, because I know that definitely falls under your purview and Unilever has spent a lot of time doing some really interesting things, especially in house. How are you measuring the ROI of the thousands of pieces of content that Unilever is putting out into the world every day? And the same goes for media.
Brandon Goodman
Yeah, this is an exciting one. And the measurement of media is definitely one that's brought up a lot internally. We spend a lot of money on media and the powers that be really want to make sure that it's worth it from a commercial lens. I'm proud of the infrastructure that Unilever has built up and their commitment to measurement. The saying that we like to lean on is that we want to be the most outcome driven advertiser in the industry. And a lot of that is not measurement theater. There's far too many metrics to track within the media space. You can get lost. I find that there's always a way to tell a great story when it comes to your media deployment. But at the end of the day, the question that you need to answer is whether or not there's a true commercial impact. And we need to hold our media accountable for business delivery and we need to use media, the measurement of media, to make better business decisions. An MMM is critical for that. We rely on it heavily by nature. An MMM is the correlation of your investments to the actual consumption.
Sarah Hofstetter
Right.
Brandon Goodman
Consumers purchasing your product at the end of the day because they felt compelled to, and that's an incremental purchase. They felt compelled to because of the exposure to your media. And that's a really important part of our measurement ecosystem. But the issue with MMMs is that they're backwards looking. And part of your question was how do you measure all these individual units of creative. If you're familiar with MMMs, the math requires a lot of data to be able to pick up the correlations and the impact of those investments. And oftentimes you're not going to hit those sparsity thresholds at a unit at an individual asset level. And so mmms are one piece of that measurement ecosystem. At Unilever, we've kind of built up this secret recipe that ends up kind of spanning a spectrum. On the left hand of this spectrum would be the distance in which you're measuring after you've actually deployed some sort of activity system, right? And so on the left hand side that would be the MMM. And MMMs are evolving at the speed at which you can read it and you know, the depth and granularity. And we look at that in detail and that is ultimately what helps us drive a lot of those commercial shifts and optimizations that we make. If you move along that spectrum in the middle, that's where you start to get into a bit more of the ambiguous measurements that sit within the cultural resonance space and the social measurement space. And the specific metrics are a mix of ones that we all talk about quite a bit. But we've found that if we focus on them, ultimately they end up paying dividends in the form of better traction that probably will influence what you ultimately read in the mmm. And then all the way on the right hand side of the spectrum, which would be like today, when we're deploying something today and or this week, there's a mix of kind of faster signals or correlative metrics that we have found to be the most correlative to our ability to deliver on roi. And they're a mix of a bunch of signals that are available to us on a daily basis. Think about what we deploy within the retail media environment. And then there's this wonderful ad tech called Micmac that definitely helps with some of those signals.
Rachel Tippograph
Folks, I did not pay branded to say that.
Sarah Hofstetter
Sorry, I'm sorry, I didn't quite get, get that. Can you just say that a little louder?
Brandon Goodman
I think it's called Mic Mac and that helps us understand how some of those more creative decisions that we're making on a day to day basis are ultimately driving engagement and our ability to tap into that algorithmic reality that I was talking about before. Right. And so it's nebulous in that like there's all of these metrics that you're kind of looking at across this spectrum and there's no, you know, perfect science to being able to make a truly informed decision at a hundred percent accuracy. But we have found this nice balance across this measurement ecosystem that ultimately we're seeing our ROIs increase, we're seeing our ability to tap into, you know, cultural buzz. I might be biased, but I believe it's because of the way that we're being scientific about that approach.
Sarah Hofstetter
I appreciate everything that you're saying and also I like a good linear way of looking at things left to right. So thank you. Despite my being bilingual and also reading right to left and neighbor. But let's just put that aside.
Brandon Goodman
Yeah, okay, nice.
Sarah Hofstetter
The way you're talking about it makes a lot of sense. The challenge of MMMs is look backs. I mean, I'm sure you, you were preaching to the converted of most of our listenership and yet we still can't shake them. But in the beginning you talked a lot about the dynamic content and the automation that you do for the dynamic content and where automation makes sense, where automation doesn't make sense, how you go from big campaign to really just dynamically changing for different audiences, for different platforms, for different needs. And then on the other hand, we talked about media and the MMMs associated with media. So when you're just talking about the organic content, but the automation of the matching of the creative has to also impact the media itself. How do you balance those two? That theoretically should be two great tastes that taste great together, but sometimes could not necessarily meld the right way. Like how do you think about that in terms of like your sequencing and how you avoid, how you avoid error? I mean, it just seems like there's a lot going on.
Brandon Goodman
There's a role for organic, there's a role for paid, and there's a role for boosting organic. Right. So I would take those three distinct approaches. Organic is a wonderful environment to acquire reach. It's, it's surprising how much reach you can get without putting a dollar behind some creative. And you really need to be culturally relevant in the moment, participating in culture in an authentic way for consumers to, or browsers on these social platforms to really want to engage with your content. You know, we see brands out there actually deploy a really strong commercial profile, even just with leaning into the organic space. And there are times where we'll see organic content be that brand, say, right? So expressions coming through our brand handle or influencers that end up delivering such engagement that's appropriate for us to put the boosting behind. And that becomes this kind of hybrid environment of paid and boosted. And in those moments, we tend to get really efficient returns on what's boosted because we already have the foresight that this is getting, you know, traction and is relevant. And again, I'm speaking just in the context of social, but like, of course that content can end up carrying over into other channels and we could do that with confidence that it'll work as well. And then there's the paid track, right? There's a different form of messaging, there's a different objective often in that. And the content ends up being a different expression of what we're saying. And that is where you see a lot more of that agility of like diversifying the messaging till we find the message that sticks. And what we mean by sticks is you're rewarded very quickly from the platforms in the form of favorable CPMs. And they know when something is, is attention grabbing is interesting and they reward you and say, hey, thanks for, you know, advertising. People aren't shutting off their phones because of what you're, you're talking about. And so we want you to, we want you to be a loyal advertiser and we'll give you a, we'll give you a discount.
Rachel Tippograph
You're making the case for great creative. That's human led with automated variations. Brandon, we have to ask you our famous last question, which is, what's the bravest thing you've ever done?
Brandon Goodman
Yes, I was thinking about this. I think I'm going to lean. The bravest thing I've ever done might seem small. It definitely changed my life. And that was taking a shot with my wife. We were in microeconomics class together in university. I only ever saw her during tests or midterms. She seems to skip all other classes. And so when I saw her at the final, I knew this moment was an important one. And I was quite nervous. But, you know, I stepped up, I said something. And that small moment definitely led to a wonderful partnership, one that is supporting and loving. We have two beautiful young daughters now. And I gotta say, the ROI on that, that brave moment for me was, was a big one.
Rachel Tippograph
I love that. You know, most people go to finals worrying about the test, but you were worrying about the girl.
Brandon Goodman
I was. I was. And I'm grateful for it. I didn't do too well in the class, but whatever.
Rachel Tippograph
Well, Brandon, we appreciate all your insights. This world that you're playing in is changing at light speed speed. And we will be watching to learn from you.
Brandon Goodman
Thank you so much for the time. Appreciate it.
Rachel Tippograph
If you like what you heard and you want to keep listening about Unilever. We certainly have had various Unilever guests over the years, but go check out an episode we did in 2024 with Ryu, the Chief Digital Officer at Unilever North America. And if you like what you heard, write a review. Thanks for listening.
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Blowing ad budget on metrics that look great till the CFO sees them. That's bullspend and marketers are calling it out in Dashboard Confessions.
Brandon Goodman
I remember telling my boss it'll be
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good for the brand when leads were slow.
Brandon Goodman
Yeah, it. It wasn't.
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Cut the bull. Spend LinkedIn lets you target by company, job title and More. Advertise on LinkedIn. Spend $250 on your first campaign and get a $250 credit. Go to LinkedIn.com campaign terms and conditions apply.
Brandon Goodman
ACAST powers the world's best podcasts Here's a show that we recommend. I'm Eden Scher. And I'm Brock Ciarlelli.
Rachel Tippograph
We played best friends on the Middle
Brandon Goodman
and became best friends in real life.
Rachel Tippograph
We're here to re watch the Middle
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with all of you.
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Each week we'll recap an episode with
Brandon Goodman
behind the scenes stories, guest interviews and what we think.
Rachel Tippograph
Now, many years later, there's a lot to dive into. So let's get to Middle.
Brandon Goodman
ACAST helps creators launch, grow and monetize their podcasts everywhere. Acast.com
Jackie Cooper
hi, I'm Jackie Cooper, Global Chief Brand Officer at Edelman and the host of Touch of Truth, a new podcast launching on the Adweek Podcast Network. My dad gave me this incredibly smart piece of advice. Meet everyone once. As a result, I've met some of the most fascinating and inspiring people on the planet. Now on Touch of Truth, we're coming centre stage and sharing the mic to experience stories of truth, insights and visions for the future that will challenge your way of thinking. Touch of Truth is available wherever you listen to podcasts. New episodes come out every Tuesday. I do hope to see you there.
Episode: Unilever's Branden Goodman on the New Rules of Consumer Discovery
Date: June 23, 2026
Guests:
In this BRAVE COMMERCE episode, hosts Sarah Hofstetter and Rachel Tipograph dive into how Unilever is navigating the evolving landscape of media, creative workflows, and measurement in the age of dynamic, algorithm-driven discovery. Guest Branden Goodman shares Unilever’s approach to "social first" marketing, discusses the changing content supply chain in CPG, explains the nuanced role of automation and human creativity, and provides a comprehensive look into how sophisticated measurement frameworks are fueling outcome-driven strategies at scale.
[03:30–06:13]
[07:19–09:55]
[09:55–12:39]
[15:42–18:13]
[18:34–21:45 & 18:13–22:37]
[22:52–25:54]
On the new rules of algorithm-driven discovery:
“It’s actually an adoption of the recognition of this transition from the follower graph to the interest graph and how that interest graph has influenced what consumers expect.”
– Branden Goodman [08:07]
On the new content playbook:
"We need to commit to higher volume as well as variety of creatives that still express the underlying idea... Standing up the appropriate content supply chain to unlock agility for our marketers..."
– Branden Goodman [10:41]
On the automation/human spectrum:
"Automation is far more useful... less so in content origination and more so around the adaptation and remixing..."
– Branden Goodman [15:53]
On measurement:
"There's always a way to tell a great story when it comes to your media deployment. But at the end of the day, the question that you need to answer is whether or not there's a true commercial impact..."
– Branden Goodman [18:34]
On organic, paid, and boosting:
"There’s a role for organic, there's a role for paid, and there's a role for boosting organic... In those moments, we tend to get really efficient returns on what's boosted because we already have the foresight that this is getting traction..."
– Branden Goodman [23:54]
Bravest Thing Branden Has Ever Done:
"I think I'm going to lean. The bravest thing I've ever done might seem small. It definitely changed my life. And that was taking a shot with my wife."
– Branden Goodman [26:06]
This episode is candid, insightful, and rooted in the practical realities of enterprise-level commerce and marketing. Unilever’s approach, as articulated by Branden Goodman, is both forward-thinking (leveraging automation and real-time metrics) and grounded in the fundamentals of great creative and strategic human decision-making.
Listeners will walk away with a clear sense of the new "rules" of consumer discovery, best practices for content agility, and the importance of balancing AI-enabled efficiencies with the irreplaceable contributions of people.
For Further Listening:
Check out the 2024 episode with Ryu, Chief Digital Officer of Unilever North America, for more on Unilever's digital transformation.