EcommerceIndustry ContextThursday, April 30, 20265 min read

Tractor Supply taps real customers for ads to stand out from AI-generated content

Modern Retail2h agoamazonwalmarttarget
Tractor Supply taps real customers for ads to stand out from AI-generated content
Executive Summary

Tractor Supply is using real customers instead of AI-generated content in marketing campaigns to drive authenticity, reporting 3.6% sales growth to $3.59 billion in Q1 2026. The company focuses on multi-channel marketing including TV, paid search, and social media while using AI behind-the-scenes for customer analytics.

Our Take

This signals a consumer backlash against AI-generated marketing content, creating opportunities for sellers who can showcase authentic product usage and real customer testimonials. Brands should audit their current creative assets and consider shifting budget from AI-generated content to user-generated content and authentic customer stories.

What This Means

Consumer skepticism toward AI content is creating competitive advantages for brands that invest in authentic, customer-driven marketing across all channels including marketplaces.

Key Takeaways

Review your Amazon Brand Store and product listings - replace any AI-generated lifestyle images with authentic customer photos showing real product usage

Allocate 20-30% of your content budget toward user-generated content campaigns and authentic customer testimonials over the next quarter

Bottom Line

Authentic content beats AI-generated ads for driving customer trust and sales.

Source Lens

Industry Context

Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.

Impact Level

medium

Authentic content beats AI-generated ads for driving customer trust and sales.

Key Stat / Trigger

3.6% sales growth to $3.59 billion in Q1 2026

Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.

Relevant For
Brand SellersAgencies

Full Coverage

Digital Marketing Redux // April 30, 2026 Tractor Supply taps real customers for ads to stand out from AI-generated content By Melissa Daniels When Tractor Supply Company was shooting its spring campaign at Diamond D Ranch in Jacksonville, Florida, one of the owners realized he had a repair to make on a piece of a trailer.

But rather than save it for later, the crew went into the shop and filmed him welding the part back together. The sparks, the mask and the equipment made the final cut. This year’s spring campaign is the third time Tractor Supply has used real customers in a major marketing campaign, CMO Kimberly Gardiner told Modern Retail.

It’s part of a larger push the company has been on since 2022 to highlight real team members, real customers, real properties — and real animals — in its ads as it makes authentic “Life Out Here” moments and local needs a bigger part of its brand.

“It’s a really great way for us to tell a story about Tractor Supply and everything we do — from the welding to equine, livestock care, poultry — through the eyes of our customers,” she said. “It’s something that makes us unique and different.”

When asked if Tractor Supply was focused on using real customers in ads because of the growing wariness around AI-generated content, Gardiner replied that the company wants to focus on the real-life applications of the company’s products. “We leverage AI quite a bit, but it’s very much behind the scenes to better understand our customers.”

She said Tractor Supply uses AI for customer journey planning, for example, and to reduce churn. But, she added, “ What a customer sees needs to be real; it needs to be something they can relate to.” Tractor Supply, which has more than 2,400 stores in 49 states, is growing its store fleet and sales this year.

It opened 40 new stores this past quarter and has 202 more locations than it did in the first quarter of 2024. The company’s first-quarter earnings, released last week, showed net sales increased by 3. 6% to $3. 59 billion. Spring is a particularly important time to drive traffic with a new campaign due to the company’s lawn and garden inventory.

Nearly half of its stores have a garden center or a live goods tent with plants. CEO Harry Lawton said on the earnings call that items like sprayers and chemicals, lawn and garden tools, live goods, and riding lawn mowers are having “an excellent year-to-date,” even at a time when customers may be pulling back on discretionary spending.

“Our needs-based model continues to perform as expected in this environment, demonstrating its resiliency. We are seeing that in consistent demand across our core categories and continued engagement from our customers,” Lawton said, according to a transcript.

From a marketing standpoint, Gardiner said the company aims to drive traffic through multi-channel campaigns. It focuses TV buys on key markets and in places that may benefit from additional exposures, but complements it with paid search, paid social, organic social and earned media in local markets.

“We look at: Which are the metrics that need to get moved in those markets? Is it more of an existing customer engagement factor? Is it more that we see some room for some net new customers to be exposed to the brand?” she said. “But we think most customers these days want to hear from a brand across a multitude of channels.

Then the next step for us is that true multi-touch attribution. And we’re down that path now to try to understand what the right blend is for our customers.” For its online presence, Tractor Supply has an in-house creator team that posts DIY content on customer properties, highlighting the kinds of tools or products bought at Tractor Supply.

But it also gets a host of content from in-house events. The company has more than 10,000 local events across its store fleet every year, Gardiner said. That includes Demo Days, an annual spring event for people to try out high-ticket and considered purchases like tractors. Early test drivers get free merch, and events are also plugged by local media.

Gardiner said many stores pair Demo Days with other local events, such as pet adoption, vet services or farmers’ markets. This year, Demo Days drove an average of low double-digit traffic increases across the fleet compared to a regular weekend. “So many people say, ‘My Tractor Supply,’ or ‘I love my Tractor Supply,'” Gardiner said.

“We have that national scale, but we always want to be about local first, because that’s how people experience our brand.” Looking ahead, the company is looking to boost foot traffic and store sales by adding more localized assortments of regional needs to its stores, according to the latest earnings call. At least 200 stores now have a m

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Modern Retail. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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