The Future of Media 2020

Page 28

THE FUTURE OF MEDIA - THE PARADIGM SHIFT: A DIGITAL SUMMARY

THE RAGING EMERGENCE OF FEMALE SUPERBRANDERS BY PATRICK HANLON

I

t’s been a busy year and you may have missed this. Late last year, thousands seized YouTube as Reese Witherspoon climbed into an oversized clothing trunk sent by Witherspoon’s BFF Beyonce and climbed out wearing Queen Bey’s new Adidas X Ivy Park Collection.

Posted on Instagram, the stunt for Beyonce’s new active wear brand was viewed by gazillions. This is just one of the continuing stream of launches activated by female entrepreneurs over recent months. Bottom line, it’s not enough to be just a music artist or actor anymore. Those gigs are just platforms upon which female stars like Rihanna, Gwyneth, Oprah, Lady Gaga, Awkwafina, Jessica Alba and others have launched entire marketing and media ecosystems. Using their celebrity as a platform, these talents have moved over, under, upside and down to touch retail, health, beauty, wellness, book clubs, skin care, fashion, and baby food, and at the same time transported themselves from music to film to television and vice versa. This is a high-stakes game in which it is no longer enough simply to have a product or service — that’s simply game stakes — you have to have a YouTube (or other video) presence, popin store, TV show, video game, music downloads, memes, print content (book, zine, oversize, lookbook, catalog), a festival, virtual and augmented reality, monogrammed private airplane — and we’ll save the rest for later. NOVEMBER 2020

Rihanna, for example, not only pushed out her ninth album last year, but created what The New York Times book reviewer Hunter Harris calls, “the golden age of Rihanna”. Rihanna became the first black woman to lead a line at L.V.M.H. (via her Savage X Fenty lingerie line). Rihanna has her own fashion house, Fenty Beauty, and her book “RIHANNA” has been published by Phaidon (retails at $150). As pop culture phenomenista, Rihanna also captured an entire issue of British fashion and culture magazine i.D. in January 2020, to allow the multihyphenate artist and designer to highlight notable women across fashion, art, culture, activism and more. “For me, this very special issue of i-D represents change and culture,” Rihanna said. “It is dedicated to some of the people who are progressively reshaping the communities across fashion, music, art, and activism — creating a more inclusive and diverse future.” Supergirl Gwyneth Paltrow has held the reins at her growing wellness and lifestyle superbrand goop since 2008. Paltrow started goop as a blog for the multicurious, all the while expanding (and defending) her blog against naysayers. Paltrow has authored several books, has had multiple appearances in The New York Times and recently launched a Netflix documentary series titled, The Goop Lab which promises magic mushrooms, healing workshops and everything you need to know about your wonderful V. You don’t have to be a celebrity or entertainer to make this happen. Comparatively corporate Rose Marcario, who recently stepped down from her position as Patagonia CEO, leaves behind a spectrum of lateral ventures started under her watch that include not 28

only a legendary sustainable clothing brand, but also food group Patagonia Provisions. Tin Shed Ventures funds small, sustainable environmental actions. And a new digital platform that is “part social network, part recruiting tool” titled Action Works that connects customers with environmental activist organisations. These efforts, in addition to Patagonia’s catalogue of books, films and outdoor gear, expand Patagonia’s total surround. These examples are not simply clothing, wellness, beauty and fashion meccas. They are exhibitions of how direct-toconsumer and expanding networks have turned flaccid textbook marketing-by-rote on its head. It’s all about loving your fans and asking them to love you back. Then expand your networks by asking fans to invite their friends. Multiplicity multiplied by multiplicity is key. In the past, superstars like Madonna (you can pick the star of your choice) released a photo book, a shoe or clothing line, or even created a new vodka between album cycles. Some of these efforts were random one offs, the beginner’s guide to staying relevant. Today they are part of the punch list for social cred, legitimacy, relevance and word of mouth (“Oh say, did you see?”). As mentioned earlier, It is no longer enough simply to be an actor, musician, artist or performer — you have to have a YouTube (or other video platform) presence, pop-in store, TV show, video game, photographs, music downloads, memes, print content (book, zine, oversize, lookbook, catalog) — in addition to the website or APP, the Out Of Home wallboards, Influencers (if you have them), conferences (if you have them), tshirts, posters, water bottles,


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Articles inside

The role of telco tech in the future of media by Tanja du Plessis

3min
pages 48-50

Media sustainability: why should we care? by William Bird

5min
pages 46-47

Brands need to worry about what doesn’t change more than what does by Michelle Randal

3min
page 45

Mass personalisation – a targeting paradox by Isla Prentis

2min
page 44

Platforms, integration and future consumption by Tanja du Plessis

4min
pages 40-41

How personalised content influences customer growth by Everlytic

2min
page 35

Opportunities arising from the Covid-19 crisis by Derryn Graham

3min
page 42

Achieving a common goal by Koo Govender

5min
pages 36-37

Energise our biggest brand by Derryn Graham

2min
page 43

Craving something novel, but not like the virus by Michael Perman

4min
pages 32-34

What’s real, fake or something in between? by Tanja du Plessis

4min
pages 30-31

The raging emergence of female superbranders by Patrick Hanlon

6min
pages 28-29

Coronavirus as a raging brand mechanism by Patrick Hanlon

5min
pages 10-11

Taking the shine off shallow celebrity culture by Bronwyn Williams

2min
page 26

Global perspective: brand evolution during social revolution

4min
pages 22-23

Letter from the Future of Media team

1min
pages 4-5

Followers don’t matter, talent does by Joseph Perrello

2min
page 27

Drop off rates from zero-rated platforms is now a thing of the past by Vodacom

3min
page 7

Transhumanism in a time of corona by Claire Denham-Dyson

5min
pages 20-21

How brands can lead into a new era by Abey Mokgwatsane

2min
page 6
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