Engineering & Construction
Child Safety Isn’t a Feature—It’s the Product: Harbor’s No-Compromise Approach
As technology becomes more embedded in daily life—especially in family and home care products—trust, reliability and child safety have become essential differentiators. Deloitte reports that consumers spend up to 25% more on brands they trust, and one in five spend 50% more when brand confidence runs deep. That trust becomes critical in sectors like…
Key takeaways
Harbor's offline-online dual functionality was designed after Lavelle's own Wi-Fi baby monitor failed, making reliability the core product promise.
Lavelle built Harbor's team by rehiring trusted colleagues from Mizzen+Main, prioritizing shared values and proven execution over résumé credentials.
Because baby monitors are typically a one-time purchase, Harbor relies on top-of-funnel awareness, simplified lifetime access messaging, and trust-driven referrals for growth.
As technology becomes more embedded in daily life—especially in family and home care products—trust, reliability and child safety have become essential differentiators. Deloitte reports that consumers spend up to 25% more on brands they trust, and one in five spend 50% more when brand confidence runs deep. That trust becomes critical in sectors like baby tech, where product failures have real-world consequences. In 2020, nursery products accounted for the highest number of children’s product recalls (16), underscoring the need for innovation grounded in safety and peace of mind.
What does it take to build a brand that consumers not only recognize but trust enough to invest in and rely on when it matters most?
On this episode of While You Were Working, host Chip Rosales, Managing Partner at Rogue Marketing, speaks with Kevin Lavelle, founder of performance menswear innovator Mizzen+Main and current CEO of Harbor, a next-gen baby-monitor system. They unpack how Lavelle built Harbor with trust at its core and what it takes to scale a device parents rely on for peace of mind.
Key Highlights from the Conversation:
- Designing for Trust, Not Just Tech: Harbor’s dual offline-online functionality was born from Lavelle’s experience as a parent whose Wi-Fi baby monitor failed. The product’s core promise is reliability—even without internet access—and a heightened standard for child safety.
- Trust Through Team Selection: From partnering with a seasoned product co-founder to rehiring trusted teammates from his previous venture, Lavelle built Harbor on relationships grounded in shared values and high execution standards.
- Strategic Revenue Planning for One-Time Purchases: With limited repeat purchases expected, Lavelle leans on top-of-funnel awareness, simplified messaging like lifetime access, and a trust-driven referral strategy to grow Harbor’s reach.
Kevin Lavelle is a two-time founder and CEO known for building category-defining consumer brands, including Mizzen+Main, the first performance fabric dress shirt, and Harbor, a groundbreaking baby monitor and remote night nanny system. He has led companies to nine-figure revenue, scaled retail distribution, and built high-trust teams across apparel and hardware technology. With a background in management consulting and investment analysis, Lavelle specializes in turning personal insight into innovative, market-shifting products that improve everyday life.
Article written by MarketScale.
About the author
For nearly 20 years, Chip has been bending the rules, asking the question “why” and looking for innovative ways to get companies noticed. This has led to a number of corporate executive roles with opportunities to lead digital marketing teams, uncover emotional differentiators and build/amplify brands. In 2009, he left corporate America to build a strategy agency of his own. You can find Chip keepin’ it Rogue performing on stages around the Dallas metroplex and rooting on the UT Longhorns… whether they’re winning or not.