HIDDEN RUNWAY

CHEP NETWORK, Sydney / SAMSUNG / 2022

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Overview

Credits

Overview

Why is this work relevant for PR?

Seen as “uncool” by millennial and Gen Z females, Samsung phones had a perception problem. We needed to target this audience to shift their perceptions.

To do this, we employed influencers to hack Fashion Week and embed Samsung phones into the place where all cool trends start - the world of high fashion.

A standard sponsorship would be lost in the coverage of the event. We needed an idea that would get people talking, grab headlines and blow-up newsfeeds. With ‘The Hidden Runway’ we used influencers to hack Fashion Week and demonstrate that Samsung doesn’t follow trends, we set them.

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.

There’s nothing more uncool than a brand trying to convince people it’s cool. We needed to find a way to talk to our audience on their level and seamlessly embed Samsung phones into their world, using trendsetters they already respected.

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 styles, trends and accessories? At Fashion Week.

Describe the creative idea

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 never-seen-before outfits, paired with Samsung phones, while sitting at the front row of shows. Their followers clamoured to know who they were wearing, but they kept quiet.

They 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 Elle. The designer remained a mystery.

Then, sitting in the front row of the closing Fashion Week show , all was revealed. Every look our fashionistas wore that week hit the catwalk, along with our amazing Samsung devices - our influencer’s socials blew up and Samsung became the hottest accessory of Fashion Week.

Describe the PR strategy

Everyone was at Fashion Week to talk about the clothes, so we purposefully withheld one key piece of information to create buzz - who our influencers were wearing. The less we said, the more attention we got.

The key message was simple, Samsung is a brand for the fashion forward. We needed to prove it.

Our target audience were fashion conscious Gen Z and millennial female iPhone-users. To authentically show up in their feeds and the websites they followed for style inspiration, we had a second audience to appeal to: event photographers and fashion editors. To do this we deliberately put the influencers in outfits we knew would cause a stir, because the looks hadn’t been seen before.

We briefed the influencers to create and post their own content, generating further buzz and earned amplification. Samsung put money behind these posts, so they appeared more frequently in our audience's feeds.

Describe the PR execution

The Hidden Runway activity ran for the duration of Australian Fashion Week, Australian fashion's premier event, 31 May - 4 June, 2021.

From Days 1-5 of the event, the influencers posted daily images and stories to Instagram, without ever naming the designer they were wearing, despite pleas from their fans. At the event they were papped by the event photographers and had their looks featured organically on fashion websites, unpaid for - always with a Samsung in hand.

Samsung put paid spend behind these posts to get them appearing more frequently in the feeds of our target audience.

Then all was revealed, sitting in the front row of the final show the influencers posted images of the looks they’d been wearing all week being worn by the models walking down the runway and finally revealing the designer.

List the results

Images of the influencers with their Samsungs achieved coverage on best dressed lists for Fashion Week including Vogue, Elle and Russh. Searching ‘Australian Fashion Week’ on Getty images now brings up images of Samsung phones, seamlessly embedded into the event.

The posts on the influencers own feeds 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 brand engagement

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