What Beyoncé’s Ivy Park x Adidas launch means for the new age of celebrity brands
There has been an awakening. Have you felt it? It began as a low hum early last year but will culminate in a deafening buzz on Saturday. That’s when the Beyhive will swarm the internet and retail stores, clamoring to consume every morsel of the new Ivy Park x Adidas collection launched by Beyoncé and the sports giant.
Earlier this week Beyoncé, in a full display of her ongoing marketing genius, rolled out sneak peeks of the new product line through stunning photos to her 138 million Instagram followers, a brand video to her 20 million YouTube followers, and giant orange trunks full of goods to celebrity pals like Ellen and Reese Witherspoon to create their own unboxing videos.
The comparisons to Adidas’ relationship to Kanye were immediate and apt. Like Kanye, Beyoncé wasn’t just signing on to become another glorified brand ambassador; she was a global superstar and brand owner starting a business and creative partnership with the sportswear company. And considering that Yeezy sales and popularity helped take Kanye from $50 million in debt to billionaire, anticipation for what Beyoncé might accomplish has been high.
Given its hype and Beyoncé’s unwavering longevity as a cultural powerhouse, Ivy Park x Adidas may become the standard bearer for the new age of endorsement, one that goes far beyond the broken, transactional hold-the-product-and-smile model and into something much more authentic: ownership. What started (arguably) with Michael Jordan evolved to Kanye’s Yeezy, but is also behind the meteoric rise of Rihanna’s Fenty, Kylie Jenner’s Kylie Cosmetics, and even variations like Dwayne Johnson’s Project Rock at Under Armour. We’ve seen this model play out for a while in booze, with every celeb and their mom emerging as a part-owner in a tequila distillery. But sneakers and sportswear have a much bigger pop cultural (ahem) footprint.