Used by ecommerce brands, agencies, and creators.
New Customer Acquisition Sunglasses & Eyewear Ads for Media Buyers
Media Buyers in the eyewear space running new customer acquisition campaigns need creative that moves fast. Creative is the biggest performance lever — and new customer acquisition timelines (Ongoing, refreshed weekly) make it worse. Podcads solves both.
Sunglasses & Eyewear × Media Buyers × New Customer Acquisition.
Timeline: Ongoing, refreshed weekly.
Workflow: Strategy → Generate variants → Launch → Read data → Iterate.
Products: polarized sunglasses, blue-light glasses.
The media buyers challenge: eyewear new customer acquisition
Creative is the biggest performance lever. In eyewear, this is compounded by try-before-you-buy expectations make online conversion challenging. When a new customer acquisition campaign hits with a timeline of Ongoing, refreshed weekly, media buyers cannot afford production delays.
Eyewear buyers need to trust the quality and style before buying online without trying them on. Podcast-style ads build that confidence through detailed descriptions, personal fit stories, and the kind of endorsement that makes you trust the brand sight unseen. For media buyers specifically: Strategy → Generate variants → Launch → Read data → Iterate — adapted for eyewear new customer acquisition.
The playbook
Media Buyers running eyewear new customer acquisition campaigns:
Brief early
Start Ongoing, refreshed weekly. Pick polarized sunglasses or blue-light glasses.
Generate angles
3–5 eyewear hooks targeting DTC eyewear brands.
Launch fast
Read data → Iterate.
Iterate
Read data in days. Scale winners.
Common questions
Clear answers to help you decide if podcast-style ads are worth testing.
How do media buyers handle eyewear new customer acquisition?
With Podcads: Strategy → Generate variants → Launch → Read data → Iterate. Fits within Ongoing, refreshed weekly.
How many angles to test?
3–5 per cycle for eyewear products.
Ready to create ads that convert?
Generate podcast-style ads from one brief. More hooks, more cuts, more tests — without the studio overhead.
