A stressed-out brewery owner is hunched over his laptop at the bar, clearly overwhelmed by administrative work. Suddenly, a cooler, more relaxed version of himself appears—wearing a retro leather jacket and sunglasses. He introduces himself as “You, but with more Gusto.”
The future self explains that in his timeline, they switched to Gusto for payroll. The process became so “effortless” that it freed up time to focus on creativity and fun again—like designing new company merchandise. He proudly unveils a hilariously awesome t-shirt featuring himself surfing a beer bottle amid lightning bolts, perfectly capturing the brand’s playful spirit.
The Formula (That Works at Any Budget)
Painful truth = Admin work kills the creative passion of running a business.
The ad taps into a universal frustration among small business owners: spending so much time on payroll and paperwork that they lose the joy and creativity that inspired them to start in the first place.
→ Lesson: Show how your product doesn’t just fix a problem—it gives your customer back the time and freedom to do what they love.
Personification = The “Cooler You” as the future you’ll unlock.
Instead of using a testimonial, Gusto personifies potential. The jacket-wearing, sunglasses-on version of the business owner represents the relaxed, creative future self that emerges when stress and admin work are offloaded.
→ Lesson: Don’t just sell a feature; sell the better version of your customer that your product enables.
The punchline reveal = The ridiculous merch.
The final joke isn’t random—it’s proof of the benefit. The absurdly cool t-shirt becomes a tangible symbol of how Gusto gives business owners back their time and creative energy. What could have been a dry concept (efficiency) turns into a funny, visual payoff.
→ Lesson: Anchor your message with a concrete, humorous proof point. Show what your customer can actually create once your product saves them time.
Humor Breakdown
The humor builds on the classic “meet your cooler self” trope. The dialogue is dry, charming, and perfectly balanced between aspirational and self-aware. The future self is slightly cheesy—but that’s the point—and the t-shirt reveal brings the joke home with a visual gag that’s absurd, memorable, and deeply on-brand for Gusto’s playful identity.
→ Lesson: Ground surreal humor with one specific, funny, and visual detail that sticks in the viewer’s mind.
Final Verdict
Gusto once again nails its message by putting people first, not software. The “More Gusto” campaign continues to shine by showing that the real value of Gusto isn’t just payroll automation—it’s what that freedom enables: creativity, fun, and renewed passion for running your business.
It’s a B2B ad that feels refreshingly B2C—relatable, entertaining, and emotionally honest.
BRAVE-o-meter Score
B: 8 | R: 9 | A: 8 | V: 9 | E: 9
BRAVE – 8.6/10
Watch the Full Ad & Learn More:
Website: Gusto.com
LinkedIn: Gusto on LinkedIn





