What to do when your product isn’t ‘sexy’ — and still needs to sell [Case Study]
When I worked on creatives for Cleo — a finance app that spots you up to $250 when you're low on cash —
we didn’t try to make budgeting or credit scores look glamorous.
I leaned into the actual experience:
That gut-punch moment when you check your account and see $4.52…
and you’ve still got five days left in the month.
And the best-performing creative?
A 9-second CapCut skit.
So bad it was good.
Filmed on an iPhone. Messy lighting. Cringe template. Zero polish.
Text overlay:
“When you are low on cash for groceries and Cleo helps you spot $250 when you
are mostly in need’’.
That one ad alone brought in 430 new users.
Problem → solution.
Over and over. In different trending formats.
Text overlays. Skits. POVs. Memes.
“Was so broke I couldn’t pay gash → Cleo spotted me up to $250.”
“Had $4.00 in my account → Cleo saved me from overdrafting.”
“Rent is due in a week → Cleo helped me out.”
I made multiple variations of that format —
and they all converted.
Because TikTok doesn’t reward high production value.
It rewards clarity. Relevance. Familiarity.
You might think it’s easier to sell cosmetics on TikTok than a finance app —
but that’s only true if you don’t understand platform-native positioning.
The truth is:
If you identify the problem of your consumer and can sell the solution
by using market psychology and real life scenarios you will always convert.
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