Bangkok Post

STRIKE A POSE

- ROBERT WILLIAMS

L’Oreal is using the runway at Cannes for its PR team to develop content.

PARIS: Chinese actress and pop star Li Yuchun glides down the hallway of Cannes’ Hotel Martinez in a tuxedo-inspired Jean Paul Gaultier gown and blue-gray pixie haircut, with a pack of L’Oreal videograph­ers trotting backward to stay out of the frame.

After striking a few poses on the marble staircase, she heads for the red carpet. The footage is rushed to L’Oreal’s editing suite, where dozens of editors and producers stitch together clips to post everywhere from Instagram to China’s Weibo within hours of the shoot.

This is how the world’s biggest beauty brand promotes itself in the smartphone age.

With foot traffic sliding in drugstores, eyeballs shifting from television­s to mobile screens and China’s digitally savvy consumers driving growth, L’Oreal SA pulled out all the stops at the world’s most watched film festival.

L’Oreal Paris, the company’s flagship consumer brand, is using its unrivaled scale to fund ever-bigger events, including a live talk show on the Cannes beach with film stars like Jane Fonda and Isabelle Adjani.

Some segments were produced in Mandarin, hosted by American-Chinese TV star Hung Huang and published on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s TMall.

“Cannes is a spectacula­r opportunit­y for us to produce a lot of content, and this year we wanted to take it even further,” said L’Oreal Paris’s global brand president, Pierre-Emmanuel Angeloglou, speaking from a two-storey video studio built for the occasion on the Cannes beach.

“The more we can combine accessibil­ity and direct contact with consumers with the aspiration­al nature and beauty of cinema, the better.”

The studio, backed by yachts crossing the Mediterran­ean harbour and equipped with a vintage convertibl­e for capturing models tossing their hair in the breeze, marked a change of scenery from the celebrity magazines and nightly news shows that L’Oreal used to rely on to get out its marketing message.

Staying in the spotlight with a constant flow of content over Facebook, Instagram and Chinese networks like Weibo and WeChat has become a business imperative for L’Oreal as it navigates the decline of traditiona­l media and a wave of retail closures.

The Chinese market, already L’Oreal’s second biggest after the United States, with roughly $2.6 billion in sales last year, is undergoing what chief executive JeanPaul Agon calls a “particular­ly violent” shift to e-commerce, and online sales made up more than a third of sales last year.

“L’Oreal can’t just depend on their reputation,” said Delphine Dion, marketing professor at Essec Business School near Paris, citing mounting competitio­n from homegrown competitor­s in China, socialmedi­a-driven upstarts like LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE’s Fenty Beauty by Rihanna and South Korean beauty brands like Mizon. “They have to keep making buzz online or else they’ll lose out.”

“L’Oreal’s partnershi­ps with Instagram influencer­s and beauty-blogging YouTube stars have helped drive booming makeup sales,’’ Dion said, “so it makes sense for the company to step up its digital efforts with more establishe­d representa­tives like Julianne Moore and China’s Li.’’

In the flurry of videos L’Oreal produced during the festival, red-carpet struts were interspers­ed with product demos and interviews with the brand’s ambassador­s.

And L’Oreal promises viewers an instant reward: In one Instagram story, red-carpet snapshots of Moore were followed by a suggestion to swipe up for a 20% discount on glitter cream.

The combinatio­n of staging elaborate events, publicisin­g them via social media and easing the path to points of sale is showing signs of success.

When L’Oreal launched a collaborat­ion with designer Olivier Rousteing and fashion brand Balmain last year, video ads linked to Alibaba’s TMall, driving sales of 40,000 lipsticks in the first month.

“L’Oreal is very clever about doing what we call all-media distributi­on,” said TV host and magazine editor Hung, referring to the company’s strategy of producing its own content and handing it over to a range of outlets.

“That helps the brand get around a common problem for marketers in China — that media owners block links to content from rival platforms when users share it, making exclusive deals less effective.

“You get a lot more exposure this way,’’ she said.

 ?? AFP ?? Chinese actress and singer Li Yuchun poses as she arrives for the screening of the film ‘Yomeddine’ at the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival on May 9, 2018.
AFP Chinese actress and singer Li Yuchun poses as she arrives for the screening of the film ‘Yomeddine’ at the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival on May 9, 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand