Social and Influencer > Social Insights & Engagement
GUT, Miami / POPEYES LOUISIANA KITCHEN, INC / 2020
Awards:
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for Social & Influencer?
When a real time trending conversation drew comparisons between employee uniforms at a QSR chain, and the world’s hottest fashion collection on Twitter, we turned it into an international conversation. That Look From Popeyes hijacked a real time cultural moment in a way that ended up flipping the influencer marketing model on its head, shifting from brands paying influencers, to influencers paying us.
Background
Popeyes became a cultural phenomenon in 2019 with the launch of its now famous Chicken Sandwich. As 2020 approached, we were tasked with finding ways to keep the brand relevant and top of mind in the world of popular culture. In January 2020, international pop superstar Beyoncé released a fashion collection with Adidas. It sold out instantly. But not before fans noticed that the items looked nearly identical to the employee uniforms at Popeyes, and erupted a conversation on Twitter.
Describe the creative idea
Beyoncé dropped a new fashion collection that seemed to be inspired by our employee uniforms. So after her clothes sold out, we gave her fans the opportunity to purchase the next best thing, and put the uniforms our employees wear every day on sale. All launched with a shot for shot recreation of Beyonce’s campaign, this time featuring real Popeyes employees.
Describe the strategy
Our target market were fervent Beyonce fans, who watched throughout the entire month of January, as Beyonce sent influencer kits featuring her collection to all of her famous friends. When it came time for the clothes to release, they sold out instantly. Knowing Beyonce’s core fans still had a burning desire for the collection, our strategy was to hijack her fan base by democratizing fashion.
Describe the execution
Within moments of Beyonce’s collection selling out, we sourced the internal Popeyes Employee store for the items that most closely resembled the pieces in Queen Bey’s capsule. Then, we recreated Beyonce’s campaign shot for shot with real Popeyes employees as the models, and sold the clothing on a custom Shopify site meant to mimic that of Adidas. The campaign was announced on Twitter, the same place comparisons between Beyonce’s collection and Popeyes uniforms were born.
List the results
Brands tend to pay influencers to wear their products and post about them on social. With this idea, we ended up having hundreds of micro-influencers pay us in order to wear our employee uniforms. In addition to reversing the influencer model, That Look From Popeyes redefined what fashion can be, by turning everyday employee uniforms into a hot selling fashion statement. The campaign generated over 892 million earned media impressions, totaling over $8.8 million dollars in ad value. The campaign also became an organic trending topic globally on Twitter during the week of the Super Bowl, the most cluttered and competitive moment in advertising.
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