Is the M&S Co-Brand a Punch in the Gut for ZOE?
Image from Women's Health

Is the M&S Co-Brand a Punch in the Gut for ZOE?

With the launch of the 马莎百货 Food x ZOE Gut Shot and our obvious obsession with all things claims and health, how could we not have a viewpoint on this potential partnership match made in heaven?


Who’s ZOE ?

For anyone not in the know, ZOE is a Davina-endorsed, personalised nutrition programme founded by celebrity scientist Professor Tim Spector . Unlike most diet apps and nutrition services, ZOE's personalised approach claims to provide nutrition advice as “one-of-a-kind” as you are. This sounds like a great thing, right? We all know the trend of moving towards hyper-personalisation for health is the golden bullet.

Image from ZOE

However, this is a more expensive and less accessible (at £299) test kit, where you provide blood and stool samples and get to wear a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) for two weeks. ZOE then analyses the data and provides personalised dietary recommendations. For access to the full programme and app, you then pay between £24.99 and £59.99 a month.

Image from Socially Aligned blog

Just in time for the resolution revellers and January dieters, ZOE and M&S Food launched the Gut Shot—a milk kefir made with fruits and berries and over five billion live cultures from 14 different strains of friendly bacteria.

Having run multiple partnerships for many brands, this seems like an obvious match on the surface.


Making friends in high places

Outperforming most of its high-street rivals, M&S does things properly. They don’t just jump into co-branding bed with anyone. And like any serious marketing mega-brand, they follow the research. With searches for “gut health” up 247% on Ocado.com since 2021 and gut health named a top food trend by 凯度 in 2023, a nutrition partnership for M&S isn’t exactly sending shockwaves through the marketing world.

In fact, everything about the ZOE - M&S duet makes sense. For M&S, with their higher price-point, focus on quality and target market of the health-conscious, middle class, ZOE is the perfect addition to the Marks and Sparks portfolio.

The challenge might be different for ZOE.


This isn’t hyper-personalisation, it’s for the masses

ZOE has its roots in science. Its USP is the robustness of the data they possess and how they apply it to create bespoke nutrition recommendations. According to ZOE, this isn’t off-the-shelf, one-size-fits-all nutrition advice.

But that’s exactly what the Gut Shot is—a one-size-fits-all product sitting on a shelf in a supermarket.

Image from M&S Stretford

Whilst we’re sure that the Gut kefir drink is the gateway to a full-blown personalised ZOE membership, we know this won’t be attainable for all. But can ZOE continue to charge a premium for personalised, unique nutritional advice when their brand sits two feet from the Percy Pig aisle? Is the brand robust or famous enough to pull that off? Will the pressure to create short-term profits degrade the brand’s biggest asset—personalisation?

As all of our clients know, we’re obsessed with evidence-based claims and for now, ZOE have no published data showing their programme delivers personalised dietary advice. Their observational studies have yet to be reproduced by other scientists and can only show associations, not causation. And there’s a lack of evidence that continuous glucose monitoring in non-diabetics is helpful. In fact, it may be doing more harm than good by contributing to the growing culture of the “worried well.”?

With something as complex and unexplored as the human microbiome, we have to wonder if personalising nutrition to each person’s gut is even remotely achievable. Maybe the 300,000 people on ZOE’s waiting list will help answer that question, as demand is definitely there.

Only time will tell us how this partnership plays out and if we can make gut health accessible to all, we will be watching with interest. For now, well done to ZOE and M&S Food for bringing gut health to the high street.

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Lynsey Steavenson

Managing Director, Tonic

1 年

I'm currently in the middle of the Zoe programme and think its good value. Whilst £299 is expensive - you can spread the cost, interest free, over 6 months which makes it easier to manage. The gut microbiome test on its own elsewhere can be over £300 - I felt happy with the value in any case and know I am lucky to be able to do the programme. Re the topic of personalisation - that seems to come from the types of food that your body can and can't digest easily - based on the blood fat and blood sugar tests as well as your gut microbiome profile. But what is en masse, and what this product seems to align to, is that good bacteria are good for all of us - there is no individualism in this aspect. I was just thinking earlier that I was surprised Zoe didn't have meals or nutrition products and then I read your article! My main issue is that its in a dairy product - I don't subscribe to milk based drinks in any form (bar the odd chocolate milkshake!!)..

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