Fastest growing brands led by creator founders
18 May 2026

5 fastest growing brands led by creator founders

The most interesting consumer brands of the last three years aren't being built by ex-P&G marketers. They're being built by creators with cameras, audiences, and the patience to package what they already sell — attention.

Here are five of the fastest-growing creator-led brands, why they work, and what their numbers reveal about the new playbook.

1. Bloom Nutrition — $350–400M projected revenue (2025)

Founder: Mari Llewellyn. Mari started as a fitness influencer. In 2019 she launched Bloom with her husband Greg LaVecchia, who runs operations. The flagship product — a greens powder — became inescapable on TikTok. Bloom passed $175M in revenue in 2024 and is projected to clear $350–400M in 2025.

The lesson: audience first, supply chain second. Mari already had the trust. Greg built the company that could deliver.

2. Feastables — $520M projected revenue (2025)

Founder: Jimmy Donaldson (MrBeast). Launched January 2022. By 2024 Feastables generated $250M revenue and $20M profit — outearning MrBeast's YouTube channel for the first time. Beast Industries projects $520M in 2025 and is moving into beverages and wellness next.

The lesson: when your audience is bigger than entire TV networks, owning the product is the natural exit. Brand deals are renting. Feastables is buying.

3. Neutonic — $25M+ revenue, $60M valuation (2026)

Founders: Chris Williamson (Modern Wisdom podcast) and James Smith. Founded in 2023. The productivity drink launched into Chris's podcast audience — Modern Wisdom is a top-10 global show — and sold over 7.5 million cans in its first two years. Raised $6M at a $60M valuation this year. Revenue tracking past $25M in 2026.

The lesson: niche audiences convert harder than broad ones. Chris's listeners are ambitious, wellness-aware, and willing to spend. A drink that promises focus instead of crash is built for them.

4. Chamberlain Coffee — $33M projected revenue (2025)

Founder: Emma Chamberlain. Launched 2019. Growth from $19M (2023) to a projected $33M (2025), with 8,500+ retail doors and a flagship café in LA. Not the biggest on this list, but a long, steady build rather than spike-and-crash.

The lesson: creator brands don't have to go viral to compound. Chamberlain Coffee got into Walmart, Target, and Costco by being patient — and by leaning into a category that doesn't require the founder's daily attention to keep selling.

5. PRIME Hydration — Peak $1.3B (2023), now ~$300M and falling

Founders: Logan Paul and KSI. Launched January 2022. Hit $1.2–1.3B at peak. Then revenue crashed 76% by late 2025 to ~$300M, with UK revenue dropping 71%.

The lesson: hype isn't a moat. PRIME launched perfectly — scarcity drove resale prices to $1,500 a can. But the product never developed a reason to repeat-purchase once the novelty faded. The creator-founder advantage only works if the product itself can stand alone after the marketing oxygen leaves the room.

The pattern

Three things separate the brands compounding from the brands fading:

1. A founder who actually appears in the marketing — not just lends their name.
2. A product the audience would buy from someone else — i.e. the category has organic demand, not just creator pull.
3. A real operations team behind the founder — the creator builds demand, but they don't run the supply chain.

Most creator brands miss #3. The ones that hit it are building real companies.

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