The sports sponsorship landscape has long been chock-full of spirits, snacks, and soda brands. Categories like beauty, shapewear, and feminine care, though, have tended to be less active in the space.
That’s starting to change. This year’s Super Bowl proved fruitful for beauty and skin-care advertisers like CeraVe, e.l.f. Cosmetics, and NYX Cosmetics, and this WNBA season features a group of sponsors like Bumble, Skims, Mielle, and Opill, many of which are newer to the sports world. Those partners have helped contribute to an all-time high in demand for league partnerships, according to Chief Growth Officer Colie Edison.
“A lot of the demand and the interest and the growth is coming from brands who are non-endemic,” Edison told Marketing Brew. “They really may have never had sports sponsorships before and are dipping their toes in the water with a partnership through the league.”
And after just a season or two with the W, some of them are doubling down on their investments.
“Perfect partnership”: Hair-care brand Mielle first got involved with the W last year, when President Omar Goff was looking for ways to show that its products can “withstand the toughest conditions”—like, for instance, games and training.
- “Everybody is showing traditional hair models and traditional standards of beauty, and that has historically excluded many groups,” Goff said. “I felt like the WNBA was the perfect partnership.”
Mielle has activated at the WNBA Draft and All-Star Weekend, this year increasing the size of its booth at All-Star and partnering with players like Chicago Sky rookie center Kamilla Cardoso and Las Vegas Aces center and three-time league MVP A’ja Wilson. Some fans waited in line for three hours to meet Wilson at Mielle’s All-Star booth, Goff said.
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