Episode 136

Mad Rabbit: Why Building a Tattoo Brand Is Really About Selling a Lifestyle

Erin Murray & Irving Gonzalez
Erin Murray & Irving Gonzalez
Fractional CBO & Lifecycle Marketing Manager

In this episode we talked about:

  • The importance of maintaining brand cohesion across digital and physical retail environments
  • How Mad Rabbit uses community feedback to determine their retail expansion strategy
  • The reasoning behind choosing a membership model over a traditional subscription service
  • Why authenticity is critical when marketing to culturally sensitive consumer groups
  • Strategies for using AI for operational efficiency without losing the brand's voice
  • Insights into identifying product market fit in a rapidly growing niche category

🎧 Listen now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube

Episode highlights:

2:25 – Creating a brand identity that breaks through categories

6:49 – Scaling a cohesive brand from D2C to retail giants

8:15 – Why membership works when subscriptions fail

12:57 – Navigating the risks and rewards of generative AI

16:08 – Using AI for data reporting and operational speed

16:57 – Identifying product market fit in a growing industry

Erin & Murray's Bottom Line: The brands that win in emerging categories aren't the ones chasing the biggest retailers or the most sophisticated retention tools — they're the ones obsessed with community first. Know your customer deeply enough, and they'll tell you where they want to find you on the shelf, why a membership beats a subscription for their buying pattern, and when AI-generated content crosses a line for their culture. Build the brand world they want to live in, and everything else — retail, loyalty, growth — follows from that.

FAQ

Erin Murray's approach is to lead with brand identity rather than category positioning. Whether a category exists or not, the question is always: how do you build a brand world the customer wants to adopt? For Mad Rabbit, that meant crafting a story around tattoo culture, lifestyle, and community — not just product efficacy. The goal was to build an identity customers see themselves in, which is what drives retention, advocacy, and retail success beyond just product-market fit.
Subscriptions only worked for four or five of Mad Rabbit's fifteen products — a model too narrow to scale. More importantly, tattoo care doesn't follow a predictable repurchase cadence; customers buy based on specific lifecycle moments like getting a new tattoo, not on a fixed schedule. Irving Gonzalez built the membership program to capitalize on Mad Rabbit's loyal fan base instead, giving members access to the full catalog rather than a limited SKU set. Members have become their highest-LTV customers with the strongest repeat purchase rates, far outperforming what the subscription model ever delivered.
Rather than defaulting to prestige beauty — where many brands in their position would have gone — Mad Rabbit surveyed their community multiple times across multiple years to find out where customers actually wanted to see them. The answer was mass retail: Target, Walmart, and the body care aisle. That customer-led retail strategy drove real success. They're now also testing Ulta's marketplace, where they're learning about a female consumer cohort that shops very differently from their core Walmart and Amazon customer.
Mad Rabbit was an early adopter of generative AI for things like holiday campaign imagery, but they draw a firm line at using AI-generated models or photography. Their customer is authenticity-sensitive, and tattoo culture demands real tattoos on real skin. Operationally, AI has been valuable for reporting automation, email and SMS optimization, and speeding up copy iteration — but any AI-generated output still gets reviewed to ensure the brand voice is actually there. Irving's note: learning to prompt well is essential, otherwise AI costs you just as much time as doing it yourself.
Erin points to two signals. First, Mad Rabbit had already built 100,000 Instagram followers within roughly a year and a half of founding — before she even joined in September 2021. Second, the macro data was undeniable: the share of North Americans with at least one tattoo roughly doubled from about 20% in 2012 to 41% by early 2022, with COVID accelerating the trend as people sought self-expression. The confirmation came in late 2023 when Walmart agreed to carry Mad Rabbit in-store — a mass-market bet that signaled the category had gone truly mainstream.

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