Burberry becomes the first luxury brand to run a Snapchat Discover channel native ad

Burberry has secured a prominent spot on Snapchat today by running its very own Discover channel for the next 24 hours, an ephemeral native ad with a suite of branded content.

The channel, which can be found in the first slot of the Discover tab of Snapchat, is dedicated to promoting Mr. Burberry, the luxury brand’s latest men’s fragrance and accompanying capsule collection and men’s grooming products. While many fashion houses, including Burberry as well as Marc Jacobs, Alexander Wang and Chanel, have launched Snapchat accounts to show behind-the-scenes footage and stream runway shows, this marks the first time a luxury fashion brand has sponsored an entire Discover channel.

Snapchat’s Discover section is mostly populated by content from publishers like Mashable, BuzzFeed and Vice, which have taken to creating original fare for the channel. In October, Sony Pictures released a paid channel to promote the James Bond installment “Spectre,” making it the first brand to purchase the property on Snapchat.

Within the Burberry-sponsored channel is a collection of articles, videos and interviews, as well as grooming and style tips, all centering on the theme “how to be a modern man.” A guide to spotting a good suit, how to wear fragrance, the steps of a good grooming routine, and a “stylish man’s guide to London,” mark the editorial content promoting the fragrance, along with the story behind the inspiration of the scent.

Videos include a “Mr. Burberry” short directed by Steve McQueen, the photographer who shot the advertisements for the fragrance, clips showing the making of the fragrance, and a performance by Benjamin Clementine recorded exclusively for the channel.

Screen Shot 2016-04-04 at 12.48.19 PM

Burberry’s digital team creates all of the content for its social platforms, including Snapchat, in-house. In October, the brand took to its own Snapchat account to premiere its fall advertising campaign, shot by Mario Testino. Burberry did not respond to a request for comment on how much the Snapchat Discover channel cost to sponsor, or how many people worked on its production. However, a Recode article last year said that publishers were able to ask advertisers for between $50,000 to $100,000 to run ads on their Discover channels for one day.

The British fashion house has become the pioneer luxury brand when it comes to traversing new digital terrain. Digital think tank L2 recognized it as the top digital luxury brand in its 2015 Index Report, which ranked more than 100 luxury brands based on their prowess on social media, e-commerce and mobile. Its approach, according to the brand, is to bring customers in close through various platforms, like Snapchat, WeChat, Twitter and Instagram. The company refers to itself as a “young-old” brand, as it combines its heritage status with innovative pushes.

The sponsored Snapchat story will appear in the Discover tab for just 24 hours before disappearing. In stores surrounding the menswear fragrance and products, shoppers will be directed to scan the “snapcode” to find the content on the platform.

“Digital is a fundamental and integral part of who we are — it’s central to our way of thinking,” said CEO Christopher Bailey in a previous interview with Digiday.

https://digiday.com/?p=170483

More in Marketing

WTF is the CMA — the Competition and Markets Authority

Why does the CMA’s opinion on Google’s Privacy Sandbox matter so much? Stick around to uncover why.

Marketing Briefing: How the ‘proliferation of boycotting’ has marketers working understand the real harm of brand blockades

While the reasons for the boycotts vary, there’s a recognition among marketers now that a brand boycott could happen regardless of their efforts – and for reasons outside of marketing and advertising – that will need to be dealt with. 

Temu’s ad blitz exposes DTC turmoil: decoding the turbulent terrain

DTC marketers are pointing fingers at Temu, attributing the sharp surge in advertising costs across Meta’s ad platforms to its ad dollars.