The customer avatar wasn't invented by a marketer. It was invented by a software developer in 1983 who just wanted to know how someone would click through his app. And yet, we've built entire marketing strategies around it. In this episode, we're gonna question everything we know about avatars so you can too. 😅
We get into why obsessing over WHO your customer is (age, gender, zip code) might actually be the wrong starting point and what we think marketers should be focusing on instead: When → Why → Who.
Market to the moment first, understand the emotional driver second, and let the demographic details do the last 5% of the work. From OG watch brand case studies to the Taco Bell drive-through at midnight, this one was just a brain dump of consciousness around one simple question: how should we be building avatars that scale in 2026 and beyond?
⚡ IN THIS EPISODE
→ Why the customer avatar was designed to understand *behavior*, not predict who would buy
→ The difference between psychographic avatars and avatars that actually tell you what to do
→ How the same ad made men and women buy the exact same watch for completely different reasons — and why that's the whole point
→ The "when" framework: how to map customer wins first, emotions second, and demographics last
→ Why Taco Bell's "open late" campaign is a masterclass in marketing to the moment, not the person
👉 Join Sarah's Creative Strategy Community: skool.com/tether-lab
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🎙 CO-HOSTS
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Sarah Levinger
🌐 tetherinsights.io
🐦 x.com/SarahLevinger
💼 linkedin.com/in/sarahlevinger
📸 instagram.com/sarah.levinger
▶️ youtube.com/channel/UCKwfjt_7PU5N_2fTfHemXXg
Nate Lagos
🐦 x.com/natelagos
💼 linkedin.com/in/natelagos
🎧 Tactical & Practical Podcast: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tactical-practical/id1752915534