SHAPING WHAT’S NEXT IN MEDIA

Last chance to save on Digiday Publishing Summit passes is February 9

SECURE YOUR SEAT

The NBA elite, as defined by emojis

Apparently lots of NBA players discovered emojis yesterday.

The so-called Great NBA Emoji Full Court Press of 2015 was sparked a coyish tweet from Dallas Mavericks player Chandler Parsons tweeting a picture of a plane alluding to the news that DeAndre Jordan was being traded from the Los Angeles Clippers to Dallas.

From there, other players, from Chris Paul to Blake Griffin, jokingly tweeted emojis as what they were up to.

But it was Nike’s Jordan brand that dropped the mic. They tweeted out a picture of a goat emoji (shorthand for “greatest of all time”) and another tweet with six trophies signaling the number of championships he won.

Both tweets amassed more than 50,000 retweets and 35,000 favorites combined.

Nike’s Jordan brand is a client of the New York-based social media agency Laundry Service and that triggered CEO Jason Stein to go even further with it. So, along with his friend ESPN sports business analyst Darren Rovell, the duo kicked around ideas of what emojis define other famous NBA players.

For example, Dallas Mavericks’ Dirk Nowitzki is German so naturally he’s a the German flag emoji and Chicago Bulls player Derrick Rose appropriately is the rose emoji. The full chart is below:

What about Stein’s favorite, besides his crew’s Jordan’s goat emoji? “I’d go with Jerry West a.k.a. The Logo,” who is the trademark emoji. He told Digiday that a MLB version is coming soon.

Featured image via Flickr.

More in Marketing

‘Our marketing is not a bullshit machine’: Why Perplexity is investing in targeted, organic growth

Perplexity is banking on its name carrying weight to keep current users engaged and attract new ones

As AI catches on across luxury, brands play up their emotional value

At Shoptalk Luxe, vendors and brands alike described deeper AI integration than ever before.

A laptop screen displaying a keyhole, symbolizing privacy and security, reflecting how personalization and privacy shape digital marketing strategies.

Future of Marketing Briefing: Advertising’s tracking system meets a new political reality

The privacy debate in advertising is entering a phase when decisions will stick.