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BRAVE COMMERCE
Treasury Wine Estates’ Justin Noland on Navigating Headwinds and Elevating the Wine Experience
In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Justin Noland, VP of Digital Experience at Treasury Wine Estates, joins host Rachel Tipograph and guest co-host Melissa Burdick live from the ShopTalk floor. Together, they explore how Treasury is responding to challenges facing the wine industry while building stronger digital and consumer experiences.
Justin explains how the company addresses climate change, regulatory hurdles, and shifting preferences by combining innovation, sustainability, and storytelling. He also shares his perspective on luxury growth, retail media in a restricted category, and how Treasury approaches influencer marketing with authenticity.
For anyone in a highly regulated or tradition-rich category, this episode is a valuable look into how collaboration and experimentation can unlock growth.
Key Takeaways
- Collaboration fuels innovation – Treasury Wine Estates leans on cross-functional teams to meet challenges in sustainability, regulation, and digital transformation
- Luxury is resilient – Wine brands like DAOU are thriving by connecting premium experiences with meaningful consumer occasions
- Regulation demands creativity – Influencer partnerships, social experimentation, and retailer collaboration are critical to navigating advertising constraints
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Kellanova’s Louise Cotterill on Turning Clean Room Data Into Sales Impact and Cultural Change
27:53|In this episode, recorded live at Shoptalk, Sarah Hofstetter sits down with Louise Cotterill, Global Senior Director of Insights and Intelligence at Kellanova, for a wide-ranging conversation on how to turn complex data into business results and build cross-functional trust along the way.Louise shares how her team built a proprietary clean room solution to drive more precise audience targeting, tailor creative to shifting shopper behavior, and ultimately deliver a 36 percent sales lift for Special K in the UK. She also explains how marketers can move from one-size-fits-all campaigns to dynamic, behavior-based segmentation, even without first-party data.Beyond the tech, Louise emphasizes the importance of soft skills. From speaking the language of the CFO to running test-and-learn pilots that bring skeptical teams along gradually, she shows how marketers can lead with both credibility and curiosity. In a standout personal moment, she reveals the bravest thing she’s ever done: spending a summer living with nomadic eagle hunters in Mongolia.Key takeaways:Insights only matter if they drive action. Clean rooms enable smarter targeting and measurement, but results come from applying those insights across creative and media strategy.Buy-in is built through transparency. Louise outlines how gradual testing, third-party validation, and a shared focus on sales help teams embrace new tools with confidence.Transformation is both technical and cultural. Success depends on aligning stakeholders, evolving incentives, and creating a safe space to test, learn, and adapt.
Mars Wrigley’s Neil Reynolds on Building Global Digital Commerce from the Ground Up
26:05|In this episode, recorded live at Shoptalk, Sarah Hofstetter sits down with Neil Reynolds, Global Chief Customer & Digital Commerce Officer at Mars Wrigley. With experience leading across both developed and emerging markets, Neil shares what it takes to modernize digital commerce and retail partnerships at global scale.He breaks down how Mars Wrigley is investing in omnichannel foundations, aligning teams across functions, and collaborating more strategically with retailers around the world. From building fit-for-purpose capabilities to navigating internal complexity, Neil offers a practical lens on what transformation really looks like beyond the buzzwords.This conversation also explores why customer teams need to think like growth marketers, and how brave leadership means knowing when to slow down, simplify, and start with the basics.Key takeaways:Transformation is a capability, not a campaign. Real change happens through cross-functional alignment, local investment, and relentless customer focus.Retail collaboration must evolve. Neil shares how Mars Wrigley is rethinking retailer partnerships to drive shared outcomes and smarter execution.The basics still matter. Even in a digital-first world, s
Liquid Death’s Benoit Vatere on Creative Risk, Retail Collaboration, and Cutting Through the Noise
25:02|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, recorded live at Groceryshop 2025, Sarah Hofstetter and guest co-host Andrea Steele sit down with Benoit Vatere, Chief Media Officer at Liquid Death, for a candid and energizing conversation about what it really takes to build modern commerce partnerships that move the needle.From launching a viral college-themed campaign with Amazon to pushing the boundaries of brand collaboration, Benoit shares how Liquid Death ties breakthrough creativity directly to retail outcomes. He discusses the importance of treating retailers as strategic partners, why the media industry needs to stop overcomplicating retail media, and how to stay focused on what truly drives awareness and conversion.As a first-time CPG executive with an entrepreneurial background, Benoit brings an unfiltered perspective on navigating legacy dynamics with fresh thinking. He also reflects on the bold decision that brought him from France to the U.S. to chase the American dream.Key takeaways:Creativity must convert. Benoit shares how Liquid Death aligns bold ideas with retailer objectives and transaction points to maximize both impact and measurability.Retailers are partners, not gatekeepers. Success comes from building together, listening well, and treating retail media as a shared opportunity rather than a cost center.Bravery is a mindset. From career moves to creative risks, Benoit’s story is a masterclass in taking chances, building momentum, and staying relentlessly focused on outcomes.
Kraft Heinz’s Andrea Steele on Embedding eCommerce Into the DNA of Big CPG
21:05|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, hosts Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter speak with Andrea Steele, Area Vice President (AVP) eCommerce & Customer Marketing at Kraft Heinz.Andrea shares her framework for embedding digital and eCommerce capabilities across large organizations, and how true transformation starts upstream, in brand strategy, product development, and core business processes.She breaks down five steps to make digital change stick, from aligning on strategy to measuring success and celebrating wins. Andrea also discusses balancing change management with team wellbeing, fostering collaboration across functions, and driving long-term transformation while keeping pace with an industry and audiences that move at lightning speed.Key takeawaysLead with strategy: Tie every digital effort to a clear business goal before investing in tools.Embed early: Bake eCommerce into brand planning and product development to make change stick.Align cross-functionally: Involve legal, finance, and supply teams early to remove bottlenecks and speed up execution.
Mizkan’s Megan Frank on Modernizing 100-Year-Old Brands Without Losing Their Soul
22:33|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter sit down with Megan Frank, SVP of Marketing and R&D at Mizkan, the 221-year-old, family-owned food company behind iconic brands like RAGÚ, Bertolli, Nakano, and the newly acquired Zing Zang.With a portfolio of legacy brands that have stood the test of time, Megan shares how she keeps them relevant to today’s consumer while staying true to their roots. She discusses the importance of preserving core brand assets, creating a culture of empowerment, and leveraging frameworks like OGSM to connect long-term vision to short-term action.Megan also explains how her team drives speed and agility within a family-owned structure, how retail partnerships are managed through data-backed joint business planning, and why consolidating media and shopper marketing under one team has unlocked more seamless consumer journeys.Key takeaways:Legacy brands can move fast. Clear vision and accountability empower teams to act with speed across functions.Relevance requires evolution. Megan shares how timeless assets and modern activations work together to engage new consumers.Data drives accountability. A custom measurement model helps Mizkan shift retailer conversations toward results-based planning.
Suave Brands Company’s Noah Knoblauch on Rebuilding Legacy CPG for a Digital-First, Private Equity-Backed Future
24:46|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter sit down with Noah Knoblauch, Head of eCommerce and Retail Media at Suave Brands Company. With a background at Procter & Gamble and deep experience in private equity environments, Noah shares what it takes to rebuild iconic brands like Suave and ChapStick for modern commerce.Noah explains how he started from scratch following the brand’s spin-off from Unilever and Haleon, focusing first on profitability and operational foundations before investing in content or storytelling. From strategic bundling to keyword-level retail media planning, Noah gives a transparent look at what actually drives results in the private equity-backed world of consumer goods.He also shares how he thinks about team structure, omnichannel planning, and the future of social commerce for mass brands looking to stay relevant in emerging platforms.Key takeaways:Profitability is the foundation. Noah prioritized assortment, packaging, and pricing to unlock growth before touching brand content.Retail media drives more than clicks. Strategic investments helped drive in-store velocity and strengthen retailer partnerships.Private equity changes everything. Noah outlines what marketers should know before joining a private equity-backed business and how to thrive in the model.
Proximo Spirits’ Lander Otegui on Leading with Legacy in a Fast-Changing World
26:18|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter sit down with Lander Otegui, Executive Vice President of Marketing and Innovation at Proximo Spirits. With a portfolio that includes legendary brands like Jose Cuervo and Bushmills, Lander shares how Proximo balances centuries of heritage with bold decisions that shape the future of spirits.He explains how private ownership enables long-term innovation, why tequila has uniquely expanded across price points and use cases, and how the brand manages storytelling on the digital shelf in an era of AI and misinformation. From pioneering new tequila subcategories to building a distillery in the heart of Manhattan, Lander reveals what it takes to stay relevant in a category rooted in tradition.Key takeaways:Heritage drives relevance when paired with innovation. Proximo’s legacy brands succeed by staying true to their origins while evolving for modern consumers.Private ownership creates room for bolder moves. Without quarterly pressure, Proximo invests with a 200-year vision in mind.Digital discovery is powerful but complex. Tequila shoppers are navigating fragmented information across platforms, making clarity and truth essential for brand growth.
Congo Brands’ Wendell Venerable on the Power of Execution in a Shiny Object World
22:59|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter sit down with Wendell Venerable, Vice President of eCommerce at Congo Brands. With experience at Nestlé, Reckitt, and Red Bull, Wendell shares how he has built a career by staying focused on the fundamentals, regardless of shifting trends in the commerce landscape.Wendell explains why executional excellence still drives the most meaningful results, how to build influence across functions regardless of org structure, and what future leaders need to prioritize to stay relevant in a constantly evolving industry. He also weighs in on generative engine optimization (GEO), agentic shopping, and why not every new buzzword deserves a strategy.Key takeaways:Execution over buzzwords: Wendell shares why staying grounded in fundamentals is more impactful than chasing trends like GEO or agentic shopping.Ownership over org charts: The effectiveness of an eCommerce team depends less on structure and more on clear strategy, alignment, and influence across the business.Curiosity and consistency win: A career grounded in learning, humility, and cross-functional leadership is what has enabled Wendell to succeed across companies of every size and stage.
OrganiCare's Caroline Goodner on Destigmatizing Women’s Health and Building Consumer Trust in Regulated Categories
22:02|In this episode of BRAVE COMMERCE, Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter sit down with Caroline Goodner, Founder and CEO of OrganiCare, the company behind FemiClear. With deep experience launching and scaling health-focused consumer brands, Caroline shares how she has built a business that addresses overlooked but highly common women’s health issues.From vaginal health to product regulation, Caroline opens up about the unique challenges and rewards of creating solutions in a category that has long been underserved. She shares how OrganiCare earns shelf space, engages on social, and educates consumers about choices they didn’t know they had. Caroline also reflects on the personal decision that reshaped her approach to leadership and balance.Key Takeaways:Innovation through Education: Caroline explains how OrganiCare leverages digital platforms like TikTok to inform consumers and drive awareness in a regulated, often misunderstood category.Retail and Consumer Alignment: By offering science-backed, natural products that solve real problems, OrganiCare has been able to scale quickly in brick-and-mortar retail.Bravery in Business and Life: Caroline shares the bold personal choice to step back from a prior venture to focus on family, and how that shaped her leadership journey going forward.