According to Digiday, Bose has not hired a creative agency in five years. Instead, the brand built an internal entertainment division that now employs roughly 40 people and produces owned content, live events, and branded programming. CMO Jim Mollica told Digiday the shift was deliberate: the brand wanted full control over story, speed, and the ability to launch programming on its own schedule, not an agency retainer cycle.
What they did was replace intermittent agency projects with a permanent in-house studio. The entertainment division produces multi-episode video series, sponsors tours, stages live performances, and distributes content across owned and partner channels. The unit operates like a small production company embedded inside the marketing org, with dedicated producers, directors, and post-production staff. Bose owns the IP, controls the release calendar, and can repurpose footage across product launches, social, and retail without waiting for agency contracts or rounds of revisions.
Why it worked comes down to speed and compounding value. An agency produces a campaign, delivers the files, and moves to the next client. An in-house team produces an asset, then remixes it for email, for a product page, for a retailer co-op program, for an event backdrop. The same shoot becomes six revenue touchpoints instead of one awareness play. Speed matters when a product refresh moves up two months or a competitor launches — the internal team can turn a new cut in days, not weeks of briefs and revisions. Bose also built institutional knowledge: the team that shot last quarter's campaign knows this quarter's product roadmap and can plan narrative arcs across releases, not one-off spots.
The model also aligns incentives. An agency gets paid to deliver creative, whether or not it drives product margin. An in-house team's success is the brand's success, so they optimize for outcomes — sales lift, retail door expansion, repeat purchase — not awards. Bose's entertainment division tracks how content moves product, not how it polls in focus groups. That feedback loop tightens creative over time in ways a rotating agency roster cannot match.
The steal for a small physical-product brand starts with one repeatable content format you own end-to-end. Pick a series: unboxing videos with real customers, maker interviews, use-case walkthroughs. Shoot monthly on iPhone with a $200 lapel mic and a $150 ring light. Edit in-house using Descript or CapCut. Post to YouTube, pull :30 cuts for Instagram, embed the full version on product pages, send stills to retail partners for co-op. Each piece of content becomes a library asset you control forever. No agency owns the footage. No usage rights expire.
Hire one part-time video editor before you hire an agency. A $3,000/month contractor who knows your products and your brand voice will produce more leverage than a $15,000 agency retainer that resets every quarter. Build a simple content calendar: one hero piece per product launch, two social cuts, one email version, one retailer slide. Repeat the format so production becomes a system, not a creative debate every time. Store everything in a shared drive so future hires or freelancers can pick up where the last one left off.
Start treating content as owned infrastructure, not rented campaigns. The goal is not to match Bose's 40-person studio. The goal is to stop paying someone else to tell your brand story when you can build the capability in-house for less than two agency projects. Once you own the process, every piece of content becomes an asset that appreciates — you can recut it, repurpose it, and relicense it without asking permission or paying again.
The takeaway
Bose replaced agencies with a 40-person in-house studio that owns content, speed, and IP — a model any brand can start with one repeatable format.
Two hundred brands. Eight months on the desk. $0.003 an impression.
The branded-identity layer Chiefs of Staff and heritage CMOs route through — imprinting on real authorized stock for Nike, YETI, Patagonia, The North Face, Carhartt, Stanley, Peter Millar, TUMI, Montblanc, Moleskine, Waterford, and 190 more. Nine editorial desks publish the intelligence those operators read before they sign: The Stash Edge, Markets Edge, Sports Edge, Voyage Edge, Black's Edge, House Edge, the Article Engine, Ramen, and Fending.
$0.003per impression · vs ~$0.007 digital CPM
8 monthson the desk · vs 0.8s for a digital ad
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9 deskspublishing daily · since 1997
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