
Market Trends 2026
From TikTok to Shelves
How Social Listening Transforms into Innovative CPGs
Social media has transformed from merely a communication channel into a powerful innovation driver for fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) brands. Platforms like TikTok and Instagram create awareness and actively shape product development cycles, reducing the time between viral trends, consumer demand, and product launches.
A notable example is Coca-Cola’s Sprite + Tea in the United States. This product originated from a viral consumer hack of adding tea bags to Sprite, which gained popularity on TikTok, particularly through a Malaysian creator’s “Sprite Lipton Tea” mix. By turning this organic trend into a limited-time product, Coca-Cola demonstrated how brands can quickly capitalize on user-generated ideas, validating demand before fully scaling the product.
Similarly, private label players are increasingly agile at capitalizing on social rituals. H&B’s Snoozy Mocktail directly mirrors the “sleepy girl mocktail” trend, turning a functional, wellness-driven social habit into a commercial product. This reflects a broader shift where retailers act as fast followers, leveraging social listening to reduce innovation risk.
The longevity of social-driven trends is evident in post-pandemic product pipelines. For instance, President’s Choice’s Dalgona Coffee Cake showcases how viral moments—like the COVID-era dalgona coffee phenomenon—can extend beyond their initial surge and inspire lasting product formats. In this context, social media serves as both a discovery engine and a validation tool for sustained consumer interest.
Brands are now actively shaping trends instead of merely reacting to them. For example, Barilla used its owned channels to recreate and amplify the viral feta pasta recipe, effectively guiding consumers from digital inspiration to actual consumption. This illustrates an emerging role for brands as curators and accelerators of platform-native behaviors.
Beyond food hacks, this “trend-to-shelf” dynamic applies to broader cultural phenomena as well. Retailers are increasingly turning entertainment fandom into product innovation, as seen in collaborations like Bridgerton-themed mixes, Stranger Things-inspired snacks and burger menu items, and Emily in Paris-branded bakery items and aperitifs. Although these products may not always stem from TikTok recipes, they similarly rely on real-time cultural relevance and audience engagement signals.
Additional examples further reinforce this pattern. PepsiCo has transformed the “dirty soda” trend, which gained popularity through the Utah-based chain Swig and online buzz, into scalable innovations by launching ready-to-drink variants like Dirty Mountain Dew and cream-infused sodas such as Pepsi Strawberry-n-Cream. Similarly, Nestlé has utilized social listening to inform rapid iterations in its confectionery and beverage categories. Even challenger brands frequently launch “TikTok-made-me-buy-it” products, using virality as both a marketing strategy and a demand indicator.













