Adam & Eve โ€” VOC Strategy

Voice-of-Customer Brand Study
3,972
records captured
2,509
in 12-mo analysis base
6.2/10
brand sentiment
6
buyer personas

๐Ÿ‘‰ Start here

This is the plain-English read for presenting. Want the cited evidence behind every claim? โ†’ Full Report. Want the pitch visuals? โ†’ Deck.

Adam & Eve โ€” What Customers Are Really Saying

A plain-English read on how the market sees Adam & Eve โ€” from ~4,000 real customer conversations across Reddit, YouTube, and review sites over the last 12 months.

The one thing to know

Adam & Eve owns the front door of the online sex-toy category. When someone buys their first toy, or a couple shops together for the first time, Adam & Eve is one of the names they already trust โ€” mainstream, approachable, affordable, and American. But there's a leak: once buyers get more educated โ€” especially about which materials are body-safe โ€” a chunk of them drift to specialist shops. The single biggest opportunity is to earn and loudly own the "body-safe" promise, which turns Adam & Eve's biggest weakness into a trust advantage that offshore or premium-priced rivals can't easily copy.

How people feel about the brand (overall: 6.2 out of 10)

A quick trust note: the 5-star reviews on competitor websites are all glowingly positive because those sites only show their best reviews โ€” so we ignored them and based every judgment on candid Reddit and YouTube conversations instead.

Who's buying (6 audiences)

  1. First-Timers โ€” nervous, curious, want reassurance more than specs.
  2. Couples shopping together โ€” the biggest group; buying to explore or reconnect.
  3. Body-safe researchers โ€” the most valuable long-term customers; they screen materials and will name safer competitors.
  4. Discretion seekers โ€” live with roommates/family; plain packaging is make-or-break.
  5. Value hunters โ€” the single most common mindset; always asking "is it worth it?"
  6. Upgraders โ€” own a basic toy, want something better.

The 4 best angles to test (a menu, not marching orders)

1. Body-Safe Without the Guesswork (best opportunity) Make "100% body-safe silicone" front and center. Buyers actively worry about toxic/porous materials โ€” one described getting an infection from a cheap toy and swearing off the category for months. Being the mainstream brand that's also clearly body-safe is a position no big rival has claimed.

2. Premium Feel, Entry Price Value is the most-discussed topic โ€” but "cheap" also triggers a "cheap = unsafe" fear. So always pair the price message with quality/safety proof. Think "Lelo performance, Adam & Eve price."

3. The Trusted US Original Adam & Eve is 100% US-owned; several big rivals (Lovehoney, Lelo, PinkCherry) are headquartered offshore, and buyers notice. "America's original adult brand" is a trust story almost no competitor is telling.

4. No One Will Ever Know Discretion is a deal-breaker for privacy-conscious buyers, yet it's underplayed in current messaging. A clear "plain unmarked box + discreet billing" promise removes a real purchase barrier.

What NOT to do

The bottom line

Adam & Eve already has what money can't buy: trust and awareness at the moment people enter the category. Protect that front door, then close the leak by owning body-safe materials, US-owned trust, and discretion โ€” the three things buyers care about that rivals aren't clearly claiming.