Defying the high-CAC norms in jewelry ecommerce, this episode unpacks how Awareness Avenue, a direct-to-consumer moissanite brand, turned $475,000 in ad spend during the pandemic into roughly $1.5M in revenue—a 3.3x ROAS with a 65% lower acquisition cost than industry peers. In a space where customer acquisition often kills margins, Awareness Avenue engineered a cost structure and offer that let them profitably serve over 250,000 customers with a roughly six-to-one lifetime value to CAC ratio.
The Awareness Avenue jewelry brand, founded by Mikkel Guldberg Hansen in Cheyenne, Wyoming, used location strategy, direct-to-consumer distribution, and aggressive customer-friendly policies to keep unit economics tight from day one. Hansen’s early decisions—lean overhead, DTC margin capture, and radical guarantees—created enough margin and trust to reinvest into paid social, testing infrastructure, and operational excellence.
Here’s why their moissanite growth playbook broke the mold in jewelry DTC:
- Stretching guarantees into a 180-day satisfaction window plus lifetime warranty to reduce perceived risk, boost conversion, and lower blended CAC over time.
- Pivoting from niche awareness jewelry into the moissanite category just as Millennial and Gen Z buyers demanded ethical, transparent, high-value alternatives to diamonds.
- Framing ethical sourcing with lab-grown stones, recycled metals, and publicly documented donations signed by the CEO to justify premium pricing instead of racing to the bottom on discounts.
- Running disciplined A/B tests with tools like Personizely—removing Trustpilot widgets and “save now” price anchors when data showed higher revenue per visitor without conventional trust and discount cues.
- Treating customer service and reviews as a growth engine—24-hour typical responses, 100% of negative reviews answered within a week, and empowered support to resolve issues immediately.
The core strategic insight: Awareness Avenue aligned every part of the system—unit economics, guarantees, ethical positioning, testing, and ops—around one positioning idea: be the most trusted, values-aligned moissanite brand for a skeptical, values-driven buyer, not the cheapest. That clarity let them ignore generic best practices that undercut premium perception (like aggressive discount messaging) and instead optimize for revenue per visitor and long-term LTV.