Mass-market launches, shopper marketing, and household-name brand stewardship.
The Consumer Packaged Goods vertical has its own audience structures, regulatory pressures, and channel norms. Integrated marketing communications work in this sector requires fluency in those constraints — generalist craft alone is rarely enough to move the metrics that matter to a Consumer Packaged Goods buyer.
Audience landscape
Brands in Consumer Packaged Goods typically address several distinct audiences in parallel — buyers, influencers, regulators, and internal stakeholders — and an integrated communications program has to keep messaging coherent across all of them. This is where the IMC discipline earns its keep, because the same proposition has to flex without fragmenting.
Channel and content patterns
The channel mix in Consumer Packaged Goods is shaped by where the audience already pays attention and how regulated the category is. Earned and owned channels often play a heavier role than in consumer categories, and creative work is judged as much on accuracy and trustworthiness as on persuasion.
What good looks like
The strongest integrated programs in Consumer Packaged Goods are characterised by a small number of platform ideas that travel across many touchpoints, rigorous measurement against business outcomes, and a willingness to invest in long-form content and stakeholder engagement rather than only in short-cycle performance media.
How to use this directory
Filter the MarComm Hub directory for agencies that name Consumer Packaged Goods as an active sector or whose specialisations align with the channels the category leans on. Compare two or three shortlisted firms on case evidence rather than capability claims.
Case studies in this vertical
- Rebuilding Trust After a Product Recall — anchored on Crisis Communications