DIGITAL

How Have KOLs & Brands Responded to Coronavirus?

by

Jessica Rapp

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit: This is the featured image credit
From curating the appropriate tone to choosing the right influencers, luxury brands are figuring out the best ways to move forward during a nearly unprecedented time for the industry. China…

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

From curating the appropriate tone to choosing the right influencers, luxury brands are figuring out the best ways to move forward during a nearly unprecedented time for the industry.

China is gradually going back to work, but the impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak has left the country reeling. Throughout this sensitive period, KOLs and brands have had to adopt cautious strategies.

Most importantly, marketers have had to be careful to use an appropriate tone. Anything that looked or sounded like downplaying the suffering that millions of people have endured in recent months would be devastating for the brand’s reputation. For many of their consumers, 2020 has been a traumatic year so far, from those who have lost loved ones or suffered illness themselves to the overall effect on the mental health of living through weeks of quarantine. Confronting a demoralized market and a collapse in demand, brands have had to figure out the best way forward.

The same is true for KOLs. Brands can learn something from the way Chinese influencers have been responding to the coronavirus crisis. Of course, brands have also been working together with influencers to address the situation and engage with the Chinese people as they strive to move beyond the lockdowns of the past two months. Let’s take a look at how KOLs and brands are responding to the outbreak.

Consumers: More Online Than Ever

Unsurprisingly, people have been spending more time online, and according to one report, popular Douyin and Kuaishou accounts have seen follower numbers spike by as much as half a million during the epidemic. Brands have had to communicate with restraint, but consumers stuck indoors have likely been spending more time learning about different brands and products.

One habit that wasn’t disrupted by lockdowns and quarantining was online shopping. As stores shuttered through the epidemic, young consumers continued to spend online.

Some stores, like Shanghai cosmetics retailer Forest Cabin, were nimble enough to use live streaming platforms like Taobao Live to recreate the offline shopping experience online. Around 1,600 Forest Cabin employees were trained and redeployed to broadcast via Taobao Live. Founder Sun Laichun appeared in Valentine’s Day Livestream that captured around RMB 400,000 in revenue and over 60,000 viewers. Other brands have used WeChat group chats in a similar fashion to allow consumers to engage with employees who would normally be working in retail stores.

Louis Vuitton pulled off a major Valentine’s Day coup by doubling its year-on-year e-commerce sales for the festival. Digital fashion publication LADYMAX reported that the brand responded quickly to the crisis, adapting to the loss of offline channels by directing consumers to Louis Vuitton’s WeChat mini-program to ensure minimal impact on overall sales. The brand also added timely benefits like free delivery and enhanced hygiene guarantees to preserve the luxury experience as much as possible in spite of the unusual circumstances.

Many of these success stories reflected advice given in a deck released by marketing and PR agency Ogilvy in the midst of the epidemic. Ogilvy laid out ten best practices for brands responding to crisis situations, naming agility as a key trait, as well as preparedness to create opportunities from difficult circumstances rather than wait for the situation to ease. Another takeaway was that brands should develop e-commerce capabilities to avoid being over-dependent on in-person brand experiences.

PARKLU’s Elijah Whaley said there have also been opportunities for KOLs who run e-commerce live streams. “If you’re a live streaming e-commerce KOL, business is pretty much as usual,” Whaley said.

A Focus On Staying Fit

Image: Fitness KOL Zoey周六野

With quarantines upending daily routines, and most gyms closed temporarily, millions of people were unable to keep up with their regularly scheduled workouts. Brands and fitness KOLs have stepped in to fill the gap. Again, live streaming proved indispensable for delivering content to help consumers retain a sense of normality through the long days at home.

Nike offered an invite-only Nike Training Club (NTC) workout to its KOL community, a good exercise in generating goodwill among influencers. Over two weeks in February, the brand also teamed up with Douyin to offer live-streamed NTC workouts to a broader audience, encouraging consumers to stay engaged while under quarantine.

Similarly, the fitness app Keep released offline-only workouts to online users via Douyin. The service reportedly saw its Douyin following increase by 18 percent in the first few days of the epidemic.

Case Study: Taobao Addresses Lifestyle Changes

Chinese netizens love it when KOLs and brands speak to their own lived experiences. The coronavirus crisis has been a kaleidoscope of emotions and experiences for everyone involved, and creatives have helped brands tell stories that have resonated with consumers. Both Meituan and Taobao created comic strip-style illustrations that resonated with the experience of life under quarantine, sometimes humorously, sometimes poignantly.

A Socially Responsible Response

Whaley said brands largely suspended social media campaigns through the height of the epidemic, recognizing they risked a backlash if they were perceived as oblivious to the crisis. “Brands are still doing e-commerce campaigns, but they’re not doing the social stuff because it’s too sensitive,” Whaley said. “It’s been all about direct marketing and community building.”

Instead, one of the most obvious ways KOLs and brands have responded to coronavirus is by engaging in philanthropy or corporate social responsibility efforts. In a time of crisis, brands and influencers have little to lose by showing that they sincerely care and demonstrating a willingness to help.

A number of brands – Haier, Baidu, and Zhihu, for example – created campaigns expressing solidarity with relief and containment efforts. Meanwhile, major players like luxury corporations LVMH (RMB 16 million) and Kering (RMB 7.5 million) donated generously to Red Cross organizations on the ground. Around the world, the business has donated almost USD 3 billion to date towards ensuring adequate supplies of protective equipment, medical supplies, and other essentials are available to those engaged in the relief effort. Major contributors have included companies like L’Oreal, Estee Lauder, Shiseido, Swarovski, and Chow Tai Fook.

After The Coronavirus

“It’s not all bleak, it’s just that things are slow,” Whaley said. However, Whaley said the crisis also helped to bring a sense of perspective. “This really kind of humanizing everybody. It’s people that run these businesses and actually do the work, and they are stuck at home too. We’re all in this together.”

Whaley said that PARKLUs advice is to get ready for a rebound as the Coronavirus crisis dissipates. “There’s a really good chance that once people can go out that there’s going to be a really good pop in commerce,” Whaley said. Ogilvy’s crisis guidelines warned brands not to be caught off-guard, saying that a return to normality could arrive suddenly and without warning.

“There’s some pent-up energy – and cash, to be honest, in people’s bank accounts. They’re going to want to go out and buy.” The best advice is to vet KOLs, create solid plans and promotional strategies. “When the time’s right, you’ll be ready to pull that trigger,” Whaley said.

Cover Image: Alizila

Article originally published on PARKLU. Republished with permission.

Jessica Rapp
Jessica Rapp

Passionate about style and design, Jessica has been writing about China’s emerging independent fashion scene and the country’s creative industries since moving to Beijing in 2011. She spent two years covering the capital’s dynamic fashion world as style editor of the Beijinger magazine, with her work also featured in publications including Dwell, Design Sponge and artnet News.

DIGITAL

How Have KOLs & Brands Responded to Coronavirus?

by

Jessica Rapp

|

This is the featured image caption
Credit : This is the featured image credit
From curating the appropriate tone to choosing the right influencers, luxury brands are figuring out the best ways to move forward during a nearly unprecedented time for the industry. China…

Over the last decade, collaborations between luxury brands and contemporary artists have gone beyond mere artistic partnerships towards a new kind of luxury branding.

PARIS – Art and fashion have always developed side by side, for fashion, like art, often gives visual expression to the cultural zeitgeist. During the 1920s, Salvador Dalí created dresses for Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiapparelli. In the 1930s, Ferragamo’s shoes commissioned designs for advertisements from Futurist painter Lucio Venna, while Gianni Versace commissioned works from artists such as Alighiero Boetti and Roy Lichtenstein for the launch of his collections. Yves Saint Laurent’s vast art collection, recently auctioned at Christie’s in Paris, testified to his great love of art and revealed the influence of a variety of artists on his own designs.

In the 1980s, relationships between luxury brands and artists were advanced when Alain Dominique Perrin created the Fondation Cartier. In the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, a book marking the foundation’s 20th anniversary, Perrin says he makes “a connection between all the different sorts of arts, and luxury goods are a kind of art. Luxury goods are handicrafts of art, applied art.”

The Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemparain building in Paris

From curating the appropriate tone to choosing the right influencers, luxury brands are figuring out the best ways to move forward during a nearly unprecedented time for the industry.

China is gradually going back to work, but the impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak has left the country reeling. Throughout this sensitive period, KOLs and brands have had to adopt cautious strategies.

Most importantly, marketers have had to be careful to use an appropriate tone. Anything that looked or sounded like downplaying the suffering that millions of people have endured in recent months would be devastating for the brand’s reputation. For many of their consumers, 2020 has been a traumatic year so far, from those who have lost loved ones or suffered illness themselves to the overall effect on the mental health of living through weeks of quarantine. Confronting a demoralized market and a collapse in demand, brands have had to figure out the best way forward.

The same is true for KOLs. Brands can learn something from the way Chinese influencers have been responding to the coronavirus crisis. Of course, brands have also been working together with influencers to address the situation and engage with the Chinese people as they strive to move beyond the lockdowns of the past two months. Let’s take a look at how KOLs and brands are responding to the outbreak.

Consumers: More Online Than Ever

Unsurprisingly, people have been spending more time online, and according to one report, popular Douyin and Kuaishou accounts have seen follower numbers spike by as much as half a million during the epidemic. Brands have had to communicate with restraint, but consumers stuck indoors have likely been spending more time learning about different brands and products.

One habit that wasn’t disrupted by lockdowns and quarantining was online shopping. As stores shuttered through the epidemic, young consumers continued to spend online.

Some stores, like Shanghai cosmetics retailer Forest Cabin, were nimble enough to use live streaming platforms like Taobao Live to recreate the offline shopping experience online. Around 1,600 Forest Cabin employees were trained and redeployed to broadcast via Taobao Live. Founder Sun Laichun appeared in Valentine’s Day Livestream that captured around RMB 400,000 in revenue and over 60,000 viewers. Other brands have used WeChat group chats in a similar fashion to allow consumers to engage with employees who would normally be working in retail stores.

Louis Vuitton pulled off a major Valentine’s Day coup by doubling its year-on-year e-commerce sales for the festival. Digital fashion publication LADYMAX reported that the brand responded quickly to the crisis, adapting to the loss of offline channels by directing consumers to Louis Vuitton’s WeChat mini-program to ensure minimal impact on overall sales. The brand also added timely benefits like free delivery and enhanced hygiene guarantees to preserve the luxury experience as much as possible in spite of the unusual circumstances.

Many of these success stories reflected advice given in a deck released by marketing and PR agency Ogilvy in the midst of the epidemic. Ogilvy laid out ten best practices for brands responding to crisis situations, naming agility as a key trait, as well as preparedness to create opportunities from difficult circumstances rather than wait for the situation to ease. Another takeaway was that brands should develop e-commerce capabilities to avoid being over-dependent on in-person brand experiences.

PARKLU’s Elijah Whaley said there have also been opportunities for KOLs who run e-commerce live streams. “If you’re a live streaming e-commerce KOL, business is pretty much as usual,” Whaley said.

A Focus On Staying Fit

Image: Fitness KOL Zoey周六野

With quarantines upending daily routines, and most gyms closed temporarily, millions of people were unable to keep up with their regularly scheduled workouts. Brands and fitness KOLs have stepped in to fill the gap. Again, live streaming proved indispensable for delivering content to help consumers retain a sense of normality through the long days at home.

Nike offered an invite-only Nike Training Club (NTC) workout to its KOL community, a good exercise in generating goodwill among influencers. Over two weeks in February, the brand also teamed up with Douyin to offer live-streamed NTC workouts to a broader audience, encouraging consumers to stay engaged while under quarantine.

Similarly, the fitness app Keep released offline-only workouts to online users via Douyin. The service reportedly saw its Douyin following increase by 18 percent in the first few days of the epidemic.

Case Study: Taobao Addresses Lifestyle Changes

Chinese netizens love it when KOLs and brands speak to their own lived experiences. The coronavirus crisis has been a kaleidoscope of emotions and experiences for everyone involved, and creatives have helped brands tell stories that have resonated with consumers. Both Meituan and Taobao created comic strip-style illustrations that resonated with the experience of life under quarantine, sometimes humorously, sometimes poignantly.

A Socially Responsible Response

Whaley said brands largely suspended social media campaigns through the height of the epidemic, recognizing they risked a backlash if they were perceived as oblivious to the crisis. “Brands are still doing e-commerce campaigns, but they’re not doing the social stuff because it’s too sensitive,” Whaley said. “It’s been all about direct marketing and community building.”

Instead, one of the most obvious ways KOLs and brands have responded to coronavirus is by engaging in philanthropy or corporate social responsibility efforts. In a time of crisis, brands and influencers have little to lose by showing that they sincerely care and demonstrating a willingness to help.

A number of brands – Haier, Baidu, and Zhihu, for example – created campaigns expressing solidarity with relief and containment efforts. Meanwhile, major players like luxury corporations LVMH (RMB 16 million) and Kering (RMB 7.5 million) donated generously to Red Cross organizations on the ground. Around the world, the business has donated almost USD 3 billion to date towards ensuring adequate supplies of protective equipment, medical supplies, and other essentials are available to those engaged in the relief effort. Major contributors have included companies like L’Oreal, Estee Lauder, Shiseido, Swarovski, and Chow Tai Fook.

After The Coronavirus

“It’s not all bleak, it’s just that things are slow,” Whaley said. However, Whaley said the crisis also helped to bring a sense of perspective. “This really kind of humanizing everybody. It’s people that run these businesses and actually do the work, and they are stuck at home too. We’re all in this together.”

Whaley said that PARKLUs advice is to get ready for a rebound as the Coronavirus crisis dissipates. “There’s a really good chance that once people can go out that there’s going to be a really good pop in commerce,” Whaley said. Ogilvy’s crisis guidelines warned brands not to be caught off-guard, saying that a return to normality could arrive suddenly and without warning.

“There’s some pent-up energy – and cash, to be honest, in people’s bank accounts. They’re going to want to go out and buy.” The best advice is to vet KOLs, create solid plans and promotional strategies. “When the time’s right, you’ll be ready to pull that trigger,” Whaley said.

Cover Image: Alizila

Article originally published on PARKLU. Republished with permission.

Jessica Rapp

Passionate about style and design, Jessica has been writing about China’s emerging independent fashion scene and the country’s creative industries since moving to Beijing in 2011. She spent two years covering the capital’s dynamic fashion world as style editor of the Beijinger magazine, with her work also featured in publications including Dwell, Design Sponge and artnet News.

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