Marketing Campaigns We Loved In March
Guys… we made it.
Spring is finally here. How are we feeling? Better? Can you feel the seasonal slump starting to lift?
The sun is (occasionally) shining, the days are getting longer, and while we may have had a slight hiatus from this series, it’s safe to say things have been busy at TLH. Not a bad problem to have, we love it, but February flew by in about 10 minutes, and before we knew it, we were still wrapping up January.
But now the dust has settled… let’s get into some campaigns we’ve been loving.
Tesco – ‘Want Anything from Tesco?’
We’ve all said it.
“Want anything from Tesco?” – probably more times than we can count.
So what did Tesco do? Turned it into a campaign.
Simple, relatable, and spot on. The billboards showcased everyday “top-up shop” items, the kind of things you pop in for and inevitably leave with more than planned. Placed perfectly in high-footfall areas, it felt like the brand was speaking directly to you mid-errand.
It’s a great reminder that you don’t always need a complex idea. Sometimes, the most powerful campaigns come from the most familiar moments.
Sainsbury’s — Japanese Ice Cream Trend
You know when you see something online and think, “I need to try that”… and then it’s sold out everywhere? Yep. Same.
Sainsbury’s tapped directly into that frustration, jumping on the viral Japanese ice cream trend and showing customers exactly what they needed to recreate it at home.
It was simple, reactive, and perfectly timed. No overthinking, no overcomplication, just meeting demand in the moment and making it easy for people to get involved.
Safe to say… we’ve all been influenced.
Molly-Mae – Maebe Village
If you’ve read these before, you’ll know – I’m a Molly-Mae fan. And honestly, her approach to personal branding and marketing rarely misses.
So when Maebe Village popped up, it was always going to be good.
What made it stand out wasn’t just the hype (which, let’s be honest, was guaranteed). It was the execution. The focus wasn’t solely on Molly; it was on the community, the experience, and celebrating women in a way that felt genuine, not forced.
She knows her audience, she knows how to show up for them, and she consistently turns engagement into something bigger than just a product drop.
We’re watching this one closely.
SULT – ‘Sulty Sunday’
We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: we love what SULT is doing.
Their latest campaign, Sulty Sunday, is another example of how to get positioning exactly right. Electrolytes are often boxed into the “for athletes only” category, but SULT continues to challenge that.
Using their team to create different, relatable personalities, they showed how their product fits into everyday life, not just gym sessions.
It’s clear, engaging, and easy to understand. And when you’re dealing with something like vitamins and nutrition, that simplicity is everything.
No jargon. No confusion. Just good marketing.
See you next month…
March definitely brought the energy back. From relatable, insight-led ideas to smart reactive moments and community-first campaigns, it’s clear brands are stepping into 2026 with confidence.
If this is the standard we’re setting already, we’re very excited to see what the next few months bring.
And as always, if you want marketing that’s creative, clever, and actually connects? You know where we are.
