Condor Chocolates spent years building something real in Athens, Georgia. A craft chocolate brand with genuine quality, loyal local customers, and a story worth telling. But every dollar they made came through retail shelves and foot traffic. Selling direct to consumers online was entirely new territory, and they needed a partner who could build that channel from scratch without burning budget on the learning curve. That’s exactly what we did.
ROAS for 3 consecutive months
Average order value
returning customer rate
ROAS in month one
Taking a beloved local brand online is not as straightforward as turning on ads and waiting for orders to come in. Condor had everything a great DTC brand needs: a distinct product, a compelling origin story, and customers who were already enthusiastic advocates. What they didn’t have was any infrastructure for selling direct to consumers online. No pixel data, no purchase history, no audience to retarget, and no creative that had been tested against cold buyers who had never heard of them.
The challenge wasn’t just generating sales on day one. It was building a channel that could sustain itself and grow, starting from zero in a crowded category where mass-market chocolate brands with massive budgets are competing for the same real estate in every feed. Condor’s advantage was differentiation, but that only works if the creative can communicate it to a stranger in about three seconds.
We had to build the channel, prove the concept, and develop a repeatable system, all at the same time, with a lean budget that left no room for prolonged trial and error.
We built the Meta strategy from the ground up, starting with creative that led with what makes Condor worth stopping for: where it comes from, how it’s made, and why it tastes different from anything on a grocery store shelf. The Athens origin story became the anchor, because local craft provenance is a genuine differentiator in a category dominated by faceless production.
We structured the campaign architecture to test and learn quickly, running audience segments across gift buyers, specialty food enthusiasts, and craft product shoppers, then letting the data narrow the focus within the first few weeks rather than guessing up front. Creative was built around the moments and motivations that actually drive chocolate purchases online — gifting occasions, quality-curious buyers, and people who want to support brands with a real story behind them.
Within 60 days, the results made clear that online wasn’t just a new revenue channel for Condor. It was the growth engine they had been sitting on the entire time. The brick-and-mortar customer base was the proof of concept. Meta was the amplifier.
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