Driven By: Affinity Creative Group and Kabookaboo Marketing
Insights

Global Brand, Local Audience

June 10, 2026
Wine brand social media content created for U.S. consumers featuring lifestyle-driven marketing and audience engagement

Many international brands assume that once their products secure distribution in the United States, awareness will naturally follow.

In reality, shelf presence and brand recognition are two very different things.

Over the past year, our team worked with two internationally recognized wine brands, Gato Negro and Mezzacorona, to help strengthen their presence among U.S. consumers. While both brands enjoy strong recognition in their home markets, they faced a common challenge in the United States: consumers could find their products in stores, but many had little familiarity with the brands themselves.

This is a challenge we see frequently with global brands entering or expanding within the U.S. market. Distribution creates availability, but it does not automatically create demand.

The Challenge

Gato Negro is one of Latin America’s most recognized wine brands, with strong awareness throughout Chile, Argentina, Mexico, and across the region. Mezzacorona is an established Italian wine producer with a long history and international footprint.

Both brands had secured placement with major U.S. retailers and distributors, giving consumers access to their products nationwide.

However, their social presence and content strategy had not been fully adapted to American audiences. Much of the content being produced reflected the cultural context and consumer behaviors of their home markets rather than the occasions, trends, and conversations driving engagement in the United States.

To grow awareness, the brands needed more than distribution. They needed relevance.

Our Approach: Think Local, Not Global

Rather than simply repurposing content created for other markets, we developed a U.S.-focused content strategy designed to make each brand feel more familiar and relatable to American consumers.

Our approach included:

  • Creating U.S.-Focused Content
    We conducted original content shoots specifically for the U.S. market, producing photography and video designed around American lifestyle moments, entertaining occasions, seasonal gatherings, and consumer preferences. Instead of creating content that could work anywhere, we focused on content that felt native to U.S. audiences.
  • Participating in Cultural Moments
    American consumers engage with brands differently from consumers in other markets. We built content calendars around U.S.-specific holidays, seasonal moments, and cultural conversations, allowing the brands to participate in occasions that matter to their target audience.Rather than treating social media as a publishing channel, we used it as a platform for joining ongoing conversations.
  • Leveraging Social Trends
    We also integrated relevant platform trends, short-form video formats, and emerging content styles that were already capturing audience attention. This allowed the brands to feel more current and culturally connected while maintaining their unique brand identities.

The Results

Over the course of 2025, both brands experienced measurable growth among U.S. audiences.

  • Gato Negro
    Gato Negro’s U.S. audience increased by 28.2%. While the brand already enjoyed strong recognition throughout Latin America, the growth demonstrated that localized content and culturally relevant storytelling could successfully introduce the brand to new American consumers.
  • Mezzacorona
    Mezzacorona’s U.S. audience saw a 9.1% increase. The brand continued to expand its reach among U.S. consumers while strengthening its connection to audiences through market-specific content and ongoing participation in relevant social conversations.

What Global Brands Can Learn

One of the biggest misconceptions in international marketing is that consumers will connect with a brand simply because they can buy it.

In reality, consumers connect with brands that understand their culture, their interests, and the moments that matter to them.

For global brands looking to expand in the United States, success often comes from balancing a strong global identity with localized execution.

The brands that win are not the ones that translate their marketing. They are the ones who adapt it.

The Takeaway

Entering the U.S. market is not just a distribution challenge. It is a relevant challenge.

Consumers may discover a product on a store shelf, but they build relationships with brands through the stories, content, and experiences they encounter every day.

For Gato Negro and Mezzacorona, creating content specifically designed for American audiences helped bridge the gap between availability and awareness, turning established global brands into brands that felt increasingly familiar within the U.S. market.