
“Aunt Flo” Can Take a Hike
Menstrual product advertising in the U.S. has a long history of euphemism. Aunt Flo. On the rag. Crimson tide. Shark week. We have dozens and dozens of (cringy) ways to avoid saying menstruation. Our research shows women are 100% over cutesy terminology to reference their monthly cycle.

Perform Less, Empathize More
The road to advertising to women is often paved with good intentions. But good intentions are not enough to reach women. Performative feminism is advertising’s lip service, and women deserve better. Sure, the 50s housewife no longer features in ads, but sexism is still there; it’s just covert.

Younger women are more likely to have positive brand perceptions. Here’s why:
Age is not just a number. It’s a guiding light for smart brands that sell products and services to women. But if you limit your understanding to tired demographics you’ll be left wanting for conversions (and losing with women). It’s time we took a holistic look at age.

Let’s be honest here.
Women over 40 have seen and heard a lot. They’ve been bombarded by messages from advertisers, Hollywood, magazines (because women over 40 actually read magazines!), men, mothers and mothers-in-law. They’ve received criticism masquerading as advice. Advice sold as a must-do. And opinions laid out as fact.