HIDDEN RUNWAY

TitleHIDDEN RUNWAY
BrandSAMSUNG
Product / ServiceSAMSUNG
CategoryC01. Content Placement
EntrantCHE PROXIMITY Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Idea Creation CHE PROXIMITY Sydney, AUSTRALIA
PR EDELMAN Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Production THE POOL COLLECTIVE Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Post Production THE EDITORS Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Additional Company IMG MODELS SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Credits

Name Company Position
Gavin McLeod CHEP Network Chief Creative Officer
Justin Ruben CHEP Network Executive Creative Director
Jeremy Hogg CHEP Network Creative Director
Richard Shaw CHEP Network Creative Director
Cass Jam CHEP Network Associate Creative Director
Fee Millist CHEP Network Associate Creative Director
Trent Michael CHEP Network Senior Designer
Tash Johnson CHEP Network Head of Strategic Production
Karine Pawel CHEP Network Producer
Mike Deane CHEP Network Chief Media Officer
Tim Russell CHEP Network Head of Strategy, Media
Sophie Curtain CHEP Network Addressable Director
Sue Lau CHEP Network Senior Addressable Manager
Paul Isbell CHEP Network Social Planning Director
Jonny Berger CHEP Network Managing Partner
Grace Vizor CHEP Network Group Account Director
Laura Eagleton CHEP Network Account Director
Cece Chieng CHEP Network Senior Account Manager

Why is this work relevant for Social & Influencer?

Seen as “uncool” by millennial and Gen Z females, Samsung phones had a perception problem. There’s nothing more uncool than a brand trying to convince people it’s cool. In fact, in hearing from our target audience they said they usually ignored any comms from Samsung. We needed a way to talk to our audience on their level and seamlessly embed Samsung phones into their feeds, using trendsetters they respected as part of a cultural moment that would elevate the brand.We hacked Fashion Week using the people whose taste our audience already respected, Australian fashion influencers @harperandharley, @sarahellen, @_yanyanchan and @rozalia_russian.

Background

Samsung devices have long been associated with ‘tech nerds’ by millennial and Gen Z females. Given, for most, the phone is an extension of identity, being seen as untrendy by owning one was akin to social self-sabotage. The brief was clear, come up with an idea to change the way millennial and Gen Z females thought of Samsung; from uncool to ahead of the curve. We needed to make the Galaxy Z Flip not just another phone, but a coveted fashion accessory. And where is the one place you’ll find all the latest trend-setting accessories and cool kids? Fashion Week.

Describe the creative idea (30% of vote)

We hacked Australian Fashion Week using four top tier fashion influencers : @harperandharley, @sarahellen, @_yanyanchan, @rozalia_russian - influencers already popular in the feeds of our target audience. Each day of Fashion Week they caused a stir by wearing outfits taken from the final show, looks no one had seen before, paired with Samsung phones. Their followers clamoured to know who they were wearing, but they never said a word. The influencers were papped and snapped at every turn, always with a Samsung in hand. Their pictures were posted and reposted across the internet, putting Samsung phones on best dressed lists from Vogue, to Russh to Elle. The designer remained a mystery. Then, sitting in the front row of the final runway, all was revealed as the looks they’d been wearing all week hit the catwalk. Their social following blew up and Samsung became the hottest accessory of Fashion Week.

Describe the strategy (20% of vote)

Our core target audience were fashion conscious Gen Z/millennial female iPhone users. Owning an iPhone gave them ‘cool’ social standing. They told us Samsung was almost the complete opposite, they ignored our comms. We needed a trojan horse to infiltrate their feeds and change their perception. We briefed influencers our audience were following to create authentic content from Australian Fashion Week, which we then amplified. We knew their followers would ask about their outfits, so we deliberately withheld the designer to create buzz. The less they said, the more comments they got. To further our reach, and show up on pages our audience followed for style inspiration, we had a secondary audience to appeal to: event photographers/fashion editors. We put the influencers in outfits we knew would have impact, and in looks that hadn’t yet launched. The resulting content embedded Samsung phones seamlessly into the world of fashion.

Describe the execution (20% of vote)

Knowing that fashion enthusiasts, event goers and photographers loved unique outfits, we put our influencers in looks that hadn't yet been launched, accessorised with the new Galaxy Z Flip of course. Their images went everywhere. They posted photos and stories daily, never once revealing the designer (despite constant pleas). Then at the final show, sitting in the front row, the influencers posted side-by-side images of the looks they’d been wearing all week, as the outfits were seen walking down the runway. Finally revealing the designer. We amplified all the content to ensure it wouldn’t be missed. The Hidden Runway activity ran for the duration of Australian Fashion Week, Australian fashion's premier event, 31 May - 4 June, 2021.

List the results (30% of vote)

Images of the influencers, with their Samsungs, achieved coverage on best dressed lists for Fashion Week including on Vogue, Elle and Russh. Searching ‘Australian Fashion Week’ on Getty images now brings up multiple images of Samsung phones, seamlessly embedded into the event. The posts and story content on the influencers own channels from the event received thousands of comments and positive interactions for Samsung. We saw a noticeable difference in consideration for Samsung during Fashion Week with a spike in site visits and dwell time. Key results: 41m+ campaign impressions +14k site visits during Fashion Week +48% dwell time during Fashion Week 98% positive band engagement

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