Should You Buy That? Thingtesting Has the Answer.
In an era dominated by online shopping, dubious influencer endorsements, and trendy, direct-to-consumer gear, it鈥檚 harder than ever to know who to trust. Jenny Gyllander, the mind behind the product-review Instagram account @thingtesting, is here to cut through the noise.
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Jenny Gyllander spent the summer of 2019 covered in bug spray. As the creator of the review company Thingtesting, Gyllander had scored an early sample of a new outdoorsy personal-care brand called . She鈥檇 already researched Kinfield鈥檚 mission and sustainability practices, interviewed the founder, and shot photos of the products at her studio in Helsinki. The only step left was to thing-test鈥攈er term for evaluating a product鈥攊ts deet-free repellent.聽
鈥淚鈥檓 not a person who would wear mosquito repellent for a night on a New York terrace, so I did it my way,鈥 she tells me. 鈥淚 used it specifically in outdoor settings for a month during the summer, from Finland听迟辞 North America. I try to integrate the products into my life and not hysterically try them over 24 hours. That鈥檚 the fairest way to assess, Do I need this?鈥
That candid tone is what Gyllander鈥檚 fans have come to expect from , a review platform that as of this writing, but not for long, exists only on Instagram. The @thingtesting grid is filled with medium-shot photos of protein cereal, Veja sneakers, and bars of shampoo in plastic-free packaging, accompanied by analysis of each product in the caption. Part of her review for the repellent : 鈥淚 like that Kinfield added their ingredient list to the bottle, which otherwise isn鈥檛 mandatory for repellents regulated under the Environmental Protection Agency.鈥
Thingtesting, as 29-year-old Jenny (pronounced 鈥測enny鈥 in her native Finnish) frequently describes it, aims to be the millennial Consumer Reports. She discovers interesting products and reviews them honestly. It鈥檚 a simple proposition, but in a market saturated with paid influencers and mislabeled branded content, it has earned Thingtesting more than 42,000 followers, some of whom pay a premium for additional content, and one of whom is Natalie Portman. Thingtesting鈥檚 target readers are the type of 聽that marketing firms spend billions trying to woo. According to Gyllander, her audience doesn鈥檛 want to impulse-buy products algorithmically served to them between wedding photos. Instead, they try to make responsible purchasing decisions with an understanding of a product鈥檚 efficacy and the brand鈥檚 sustainability practices, funding structure, and place in the market. Gyllander calls this consumer attitude the curiosity factor.
Aside from Portman, the most powerful Thingtesting followers are investors who you may not have heard of unless you鈥檙e a recent MBA graduate. Gyllander spent her midtwenties working at Backed VC, a London venture-capital firm that funds the type of excruciatingly millennial startups whose products she would later go on to review. With Thingtesting鈥檚 help, these companies and the investors who fund them are determining what our gym bags, grocery carts, and skin-care shelves will look like in the future.
Thingtesting specializes in contemporary brands geared toward young shoppers, brands that tend to bypass traditional retailers and sell directly to consumers. There鈥檚 a disproportionate amount of Helvetica and pastel. From 听迟辞 , most of the more than 100 products Gyllander has reviewed feature a minimalist design and look like things you鈥檇 find in the same Brooklyn concept store. About half of them fall into the gear, wellness, or sustainable-living space; she often highlights the type of innovative running shoes or personalized vitamins that may already be in your backpack. (Especially if that backpack is Fj盲llr盲ven.) Many of the other products have likely come across your radar, because brand strategists and marketing directors design them to appeal to a specific base of conscious consumers. If an item isn鈥檛 on your wish list already鈥攕ay, an affordable cashmere sweater or a notebook made from stone paper鈥攊t may be after a scroll through the grid, especially if you鈥檙e between the ages of 18 and 35.聽
Gyllander photographs each product on a piece of white paper and photoshops a pale background underneath. This friendly aesthetic has come to symbolize the Instagram era, just as hot pink and triangles typified design in the eighties. Recently, Gyllander decided that Thingtesting鈥檚 appearance is a little too tied to our current moment and is now working on a rebrand. For now, the contents of the Thingtesting grid might remind you of a posh general store: you may not need anything, but it feels soothing to walk in and poke around.
