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August 27th, 2010 by Estelle Douine

Levi’s gets social in Asia

Levi’s launched last week ‘Denizen10’, a new apparel brand specially designed for the Asian markets (‘denim’ and ‘zen’, see what they did here).

Its first-ever product launched outside of the US is targeting young, middle class Asian consumers between the ages of 18 and 28 – and what better way of targeting them than hiring ten of them to blog?

The 10 lucky ones have been selected from China, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and India to represent the rising Asian generation – and also cleverly to support ‘Denizen’ which, after launching in China last week, will subsequently expand to Singapore and South Korea.

This 100-day innovative pan-Asian social media campaign appears to be rather audacious given that the bloggers have been given total editorial freedom and only asked to ‘share their experiences and thoughts’ – topics are suggested but not imposed and their blogs aren’t linked to the official brand website.

Is this why the Head of Corporate Affairs at Levi Strauss Asia-Pacific division said that Denizen10 wasn’t part of their official marketing plan? “Denizen wants to provide a social media platform that speaks from grass-root level and represents the youth 24/7”, he also added, un-marketingly.

Professional models weren’t hired for the launch of the first collection in Shanghai but bloggers, musicians and friends of those involved with the campaign – people who could be identified as ‘regular people’ – well, if this isn’t marketing then…

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4 Responses to “Levi’s gets social in Asia”

  1. speedcomms says:

    Levi’s gets social in Asia http://goo.gl/fb/AZjVP (@Mlle_Estelle)
    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  2. Mlle_Estelle says:

    Levi’s and their ‘non-marketing’ social media campaign in Asia [my blog] http://bit.ly/b7IuAC
    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  3. Levi’s gets social in Asia http://bit.ly/aLr6s0
    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  4. Steve Earl says:

    Love the 18 to 28 segmentation – are 29-year-olds too old for denim?!

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