For U.S. brands entering Canada.
Test how your product, message, humor, and offer land with Canadian consumers through relatable creator content before scaling spend.
U.S. brands often assume Canadian consumers respond the same way U.S. audiences do. This path tests the message, product angle, humor, objections, and cultural fit through Canadian creator content before a larger launch. It is a lightweight market-entry content test with a creator-led plan for saving wasted launch spend and finding the first message that works in Canada.
Choose a package.
Every package includes a creator plan: the concept angle, intended use, rollout recommendation, and post-campaign next-step notes. Higher-tier packages add more detail on how the content can reduce production cost, support paid creative testing, improve launch messaging, or create reusable assets for the brand.
Canada Soft-Landing Content Test
U.S. brands exploring Canadian demand before a larger campaign.
- 1 to 2 creator-made short-form videos
- Canadian localization angle
- Market-entry creator plan with product angle, message fit, rollout, and next test
- Optional creator-channel publishing
- Audience reaction summary
- Message-fit notes
- Recommendation for the next creative test
Canadian Localization UGC Pack
Brands that need Canadian-facing content for their own channels.
- 3 vertical videos
- Canadian-context hooks
- U.S. to Canada message adjustment
- Plan for using each asset across organic, paid, email, product page, or sales enablement
- Organic usage rights
- Notes on which angle feels most locally credible
Market-Entry Story Campaign
Brands launching or testing a product in Canada.
- 2 to 3 videos around one campaign theme
- Concept development
- Market-entry plan with money logic: what the content can test, replace, or unlock before larger spend
- Optional publishing
- Comment and theme review
- Repurposing plan for paid and organic channels
Add what the brief needs.
Optional, priced per project, and quoted on request, so you only add what a campaign calls for.
Keep Ben out of a competing brand's content for a set window.
Rights to keep running the content past the first term.
Run the content longer, or in more places, than the base license covers.
A short read on how Canadian viewers responded before a wider push.