
Ford Motor Co.’s Lincoln division will
use the Instagram account of one of its longtime celebrity ambassadors for the first time to launch a spot rather than a traditional media buy.
Tennis icon and global businesswoman
Serena Williams teased the spot on Instagram on Tuesday with a still image and the caption “Me and Jelly Bean #BTS shooting a spot with @lincoln. Feeling serene in that summer light. Full video
dropping soon.”
Coincidentally, the star just gave birth to her second child, daughter Adira River Ohanian, which she announced in a followup post Tuesday. Her husband Alexis
Ohanian had posted the same birth announcement earlier in the day.
Williams will post the full 48-second spot to her Instagram account -- which is followed by 16.9 million
people -- on Wednesday morning. Lincoln won’t share it on the automaker’s social account until next week, and paid media doesn’t begin until after the Labor Day holiday.
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The effort is part of the “genuine partnership” the automaker has with Williams, which dates back to 2018, says Megan McKenzie, head of U.S. marketing and communications at
Lincoln.
“I think what's special about Serena, she's not only a longtime driver of Navigator and Lincolns, but she's just been a great brand ambassador for us because
there's a lot of shared values between the way that we see time in a vehicle,” McKenzie tells Marketing Daily. Williams shows how a vehicle “can provide you with that kind of
sanctuary, [where you] just frame yourself up and recollect your thoughts.”
The work should reflect the celebrity spokesperson, says Jon Pearce, global chief creative
officer at Hudson Rouge, Lincoln’s AOR.
Williams and Lincoln’s other celebrity spokesperson, Matthew McConaughey, complement each other, both McKenzie and Pearce
agree.
“Just as Matthew’s gone through changes, Serena's gone through some major ones, retiring from tennis, expecting her second child, embarking on different business
opportunities and continuing with charities,” Pearce says. “You know, she is a GOAT who is evolving into the next chapter of her life.”
Adds McKenzie:
“They love Lincoln. Lincoln's been a part of their lives and what they stand for in their lives. These are people who look for ways to create sanctuary and help others through kind of finding
that peace and respite in your life -- I think that's a really important common bond that they share.
"But from a demographic perspective, they're both kind of complete opposites. So, I think
it’s been a good thing for us and the brand to have both of them.”
While everyone is familiar with Williams on a tennis court, it’s interesting to take a different
tack, Pearce says.
“She has relationships with multiple brands, and tennis has been an overriding theme in many of those spots and communications,” Pearce tells
Marketing Daily. “It's what we know about her, right? And so I think we're always intrigued about, well, what don't we know about her? Or what sides are there to her that maybe people
would want to see?”
The spot shows Williams remembering what it was like as a child to learn how to float, and the freeing feeling that it gave. Fast-forward to today with her
driving the Lincoln Navigator and turning on the semi-autonomous BlueCruise system and enjoying the hands-free freedom that it brings.
BlueCruise is a new feature to most
viewers.
“If you haven't tried it, you might think it's a gadget or not for me,” Pearce says. “And we were trying to get at this feeling of sort of
effortless freedom with it. And so this idea of floating in the ocean, you know, I think we can all remember back to it.”
The spot closes with a pregnant Williams shown
standing on a beach.
Although Williams has only been seen in the Navigator brand, she could easily be shown with a different Lincoln.
“This spot was
originally intended to be captured in a different vehicle,” McKenzie says. “But just based on some timing and some challenges we had, we made a last-minute shift to put her in the
Navigator.”
It works for portraying her as a mother and showing her as a pregnant woman.
“But I don't think there's any reason why we’ve only
shown Serena in Navigators,” McKenzie says. “We would happily put her in a different vehicle if that was what we wanted to highlight at the time.”