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Yulia Popyk from Petcube:

When Brand and Performance Marketing Collide

Yulia Popyk

Head of Brand

Company

Petcube

Location

Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Bio

Yuliia Popyk is a Berlin-based brand and marketing leader and Fulbright scholar, currently serving as Head of Brand at Petcube, where she’s grown through roles across content marketing, marketing management, and brand management.

Yuliia Popyk is a Berlin-based brand...

description

Petcube is a company reimagining pet care, and using technology to keep people connected with their pets. Its first product, Petcube Camera, is an interactive pet monitor with real time video and built-in laser pointer. It allows pet owners to watch, talk to, and play with their pet from their smartphone, no matter where they are. Founded in Kyiv in 2013, Petcube was funded on Kickstarter and became one of the most successful crowdfunding pet products in history. Since graduating from the prestigious Y-Combinator incubation program, Petcube has gone on to launch two additional products, Petcube Play and Petcube Bites, as well as a cloud video recording service, Petcube Care. Petcube products are available online and in stores including Brookstone, Best Buy, and Petco.

Petcube is a company reimagining pet...

Actionable Takeaways

Match Your Message to the Purchase Motivation, Not Just the Product:

Petcube sells multiple devices but doesn't market them the same way. For GPS trackers, where the underlying fear is losing a pet, messaging leans into data, precision, and safety features like Lost Dog mode and night-visibility alerts. For cameras, where the emotion is separation anxiety, the message shifts to reassurance and presence. Knowing which emotional trigger drives the purchase β€” fear vs. guilt vs. love β€” determines the entire creative direction.

Design Experiential Launches Around the Consumer's Identity, Not the Product's Features:

When launching the Pet Cube fountain, Petcube didn't lead with hydration benefits or filter specs. Instead, they built a ceramics customization studio in New York where pet parents could hand-paint their own fountain basin. The product became a canvas for personal expression. QR codes seeded across pet cafes drove registrations. Influencers attended a preview event and documented the experience. The result was demand signals from other cities before the campaign had even ended.

Treat Performance Marketing as a Separate Creative System:

Yulia is direct about this: performance marketing and brand marketing operate by different rules. Performance creative needs to be bold, blunt, and attention-grabbing β€” often at odds with a polished design system. Rather than forcing brand standards onto performance ads, Petcube treats them as a separate creative track with different briefs, different aesthetics, and different success metrics. Recognizing this distinction early prevents the brand team from becoming a bottleneck on paid channels.

Find Ethical Cover for AI Adoption and Your Audience Will Follow:

Petcube made a company-wide decision to stop shooting live pet photography and move entirely to AI-generated imagery β€” not primarily for cost or efficiency reasons, but because photo shoots are genuinely stressful for animals. That reasoning reframes what could be a controversial creative choice into a values-aligned one. For a brand built around pet welfare, it's consistent. And it gives their community a reason to support the decision rather than question it.

Build Software Ecosystems That Deepen Retention Beyond the Hardware Sale:

Petcube's new app consolidates device data, health records, vaccine reminders, activity and sleep tracking, an AI assistant, and 24/7 vet access into a single platform. The strategic move here is shifting the value proposition from a one-time hardware purchase to an ongoing relationship with the pet parent. The more data a user feeds into the ecosystem, the more indispensable the platform becomes β€” and the harder it is to churn.

Conversation Highlights

In this episode of The Future of Marketing, host Andres Figueira sits down with Yulia Popyk, Head of Brand at Petcube β€” a smart pet tech company that has spent 13 years building connected devices for pet parents. What started as a single camera to monitor pets at home has grown into a full ecosystem of hardware and software: GPS trackers, smart fountains, and a new AI-powered app bringing health monitoring, vet access, and device data into one place. Yulia unpacks how Petcube markets emotionally charged technology to deeply invested consumers, where brand and performance marketing collide, and how a ceramics studio in New York became one of their most memorable product launches.

Topics Discussed:

  • Navigating the tension between brand integrity and performance marketing at scale
  • Segmenting emotional vs. technical messaging by product type
  • Turning a physical product launch into a community-building moment
  • Using AI-generated imagery to replace traditional pet photo shoots
  • Building a unified pet health ecosystem through software and AI
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