Start with samples, then test the product in a real use case.
A pilot is useful when you already see a likely fit and want to test the label in a real product, category, or customer scenario before scaling further.
Tell us about your product and use case so we can guide you to the right sample, customization, or project discussion.
Who should consider a pilot.
A pilot is most useful when the discussion has already moved beyond a basic introduction and the next step needs to be more practical.
What brands usually want to learn from a pilot.
A pilot is not just about trying a label sample. It is usually about judging whether the idea makes sense in a real product and whether the next step is worth expanding.
Some products benefit much more than others from a visible lifecycle reminder, especially in high-use and skin-contact categories.
The message has to feel simple, visible, and natural enough to work in actual product use.
A good pilot should also show whether the label adds enough value to matter commercially and not just technically.
What a pilot should help clarify.
The goal is usually not just to try the label. It is to judge whether the concept works for the product, the user, and the product story you want to build.
Does the category really benefit from a visible lifecycle reminder?
Is the message simple enough for the end user to notice and understand?
Does the idea strengthen the product story in a way that matters commercially?