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How do we help men build real confidence in an AI-driven beauty culture?

Dove: Call Your Boys Beautiful

Dove | 2026 | Spec RFP Response

Strategy Plaque

Brand
Dove
Audience
Young men ages 18-25 navigating beauty pressure, comparison, and AI validation.
Problem
Men struggle with confidence because of comparison, so they turn toward AI validation methods which worsen insecurities under a mask of affirmation.
Insight
Human compliments build real confidence, but men often feel uncomfortable complimenting each other because they live in a culture where they rarely receive them.
Strategy
Use Dove’s ownership of “Real Beauty” to invite men to start sharing beauty with each other.
Tagline
Call Your Boys Beautiful
Dove Instagram execution encouraging men to compliment their friends
Instagram Post 01
Dove Instagram execution for Call Your Boys Beautiful
Instagram Post 02
Dove billboard execution for Call Your Boys Beautiful
Billboard

Campaign Context

Dove has long used creativity to shape culture through its Real Beauty platform, redefining how beauty is seen and experienced.

Today, that challenge extends to men.

Men are entering the beauty space at record levels, but they are doing so in a digital environment that amplifies comparison, insecurity, and algorithmic definitions of worth. At the same time, AI is becoming a new source of validation.

The problem: Men are not just comparing themselves to each other anymore. They are comparing themselves to systems designed to tell them they are not enough.

Key Research

Research Point 01

The category is growing fast.

$115B

male grooming industry projected by 2028

9.9%

growth in men’s beauty spending in 2024

5.8%

growth in women’s beauty spending in 2024

Gen Z

men are driving that growth

Men care about appearance more than ever before.

Research Point 02

Pressure on men is increasing.

Young men are increasingly judged in a culture preoccupied with appearance.

Social media intensifies comparison and self-evaluation.

Men are now being held to more defined and unrealistic beauty standards.

“It kinda sucks being compared, especially by things I can’t control like my height.”
Eli, 24

Men are experiencing a newer, less discussed version of beauty pressure.

Research Point 03

AI is becoming a source of validation.

Young men are more than twice as likely to use AI for emotional and intimate support.

Many are turning to AI to determine self-worth.

Some are replacing real human interaction with AI systems.

Men are outsourcing confidence to machines.

Research Point 04

AI validation is flawed.

AI systems default to flattery rather than truth.

AI affirmation can reinforce insecurity instead of building confidence.

AI use has been linked to increased depressive symptoms.

AI-driven looksmaxxing culture encourages men to treat themselves as optimization projects rather than people.

AI disguises insecruity instead of resolving it

Research Point 05

Looksmaxxing culture reveals the deeper issue.

Young men are measuring their worth through physical metrics, rankings, and optimization systems.

Appearance is being treated as a score rather than a human experience.

Confidence has shifted from something felt into something calculated.

Research Point 06

Real compliments create real confidence.

Human compliments carry emotional weight AI cannot replicate.

Compliments from other men are especially powerful because they are rare.

“When you compliment your guy friends you make sure bro has a good day and does everything with the confidence of a thousand suns.”
Ben, 23
“I’d prefer a compliment from a real person over AI.”
Eli, 24

Research Point 07

But men don’t compliment each other.

Compliments between men are not socially normalized.

Male friendships rarely include direct affirmation about appearance.

“I don’t think I’ve ever had a convo with a dude about appearance.”
Kaulani, 24
“Guys don’t get complimented.”
Spencer, 23

The most powerful confidence-builder already exists, but it isn't culturally "appropriate".

Cultural / Consumer Tension

Men are turning to artificial systems for validation in a world where real human validation is missing.

AI gives constant affirmation, but real compliments are rare.

Insight

Consumer Insight

Young men are seeking confidence in the wrong place. They turn to AI for validation because it feels accessible and safe, but it does not carry real meaning. The validation they actually need — genuine compliments from other men — feels socially uncomfortable and uncommon.

Young men crave real confidence, but the validation they are turning to is artificial, while the validation they need from each other feels socially off-limits.

Brand Insight

Dove can make beauty human again by helping men say what they've never been taught to say.

Strategy

Dove will inspire men ages 18-25, who are increasingly turning to AI and algorithmic systems to define their value, to reclaim confidence as a human experience by encouraging them to express it directly to each other.

Desired Action

Think

Real validation comes from people, not algorithms.

Feel

Confident, seen, and comfortable expressing appreciation.

Do

Compliment their friends and normalize it.

Big Idea

Call Your Boys Beautiful

Real Compliments. Real Connection.

Instead of letting AI define self-worth, Dove encourages men to build confidence through real words, from real people.

Creative Executions

Social Media

Role: Normalize behavior at scale.

Instagram and TikTok posts act as subtle prompts encouraging men to compliment their friends.

He’ll remember. Don’t overthink it. Man to man.

Out-of-Home

Role: Challenge cultural norms publicly.

Billboards and wallscapes bring the message into real-world environments where male norms are reinforced.

Simple, bold messaging creates social permission for change.

Why This Works For Dove

This campaign extends Dove’s Real Beauty platform into a new audience and cultural tension.

It moves Dove into men’s beauty not by selling products, but by redefining confidence itself.

AI may be changing how men seek validation, but Dove reminds them that real confidence still comes from real human connection.

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