Crumbl Cookies and Olipop turned the 2022 World Cup into customer events and limited products without holding official FIFA sponsorship rights, according to Digiday. Crumbl hosted in-store watch parties during tournament matches. Olipop released soccer-themed packaging and ran social content tied to game schedules. Both brands captured attention around a global moment that typically costs sponsors eight figures to access.
The mechanism is cultural interception. FIFA and major broadcasters lock official sponsorship categories, but they cannot own the act of watching soccer or celebrating with food. Crumbl and Olipop positioned their products as the companion to an event millions were already planning to attend. The watch party became the distribution vehicle. The themed packaging became the social signal. Neither required rights fees or broadcast ad buys.
This works because the brand inserts itself into existing consumer behavior rather than asking for new behavior. People were already gathering to watch matches. Crumbl provided the venue and the cookies. Olipop provided the beverage with visual relevance. The event or the package makes the brand feel participatory without claiming official status. The customer gets to participate in the cultural moment, and the brand rides the ambient traffic generated by someone else's media spend.
The play scales down to single-location and online-only brands. A small physical-product brand picks a tentpole cultural event with scheduled dates and known audiences: the Oscars, March Madness, a surprise album drop, a game release, a finale everyone will stream. The brand creates a limited SKU, packaging variant, or bundle explicitly tied to that moment. The brand announces it three days before the event with language that names the occasion and positions the product as the thing you bring or consume during it. No rights negotiation. No trademark risk if the brand does not use protected logos or claim affiliation. The cost is product development and one social push.
A candle brand makes a limited movie-night bundle released the week of the Oscars. A snack brand launches a bracket-themed variety pack the Monday before the tournament. A sticker company drops a limited pop-culture sheet the day an awaited series finale airs. The product itself need not reference the event's trademarks. It references the activity: movie night, watch party, celebration. The timing and the copy do the positioning work. The customer understands the occasion without the brand saying the protected name.
The Crumbl and Olipop examples demonstrate that emerging brands can occupy the same attention window as official sponsors by building owned experiences and products around the cultural calendar. The large sponsor buys access. The smaller brand earns presence by making the product contextually relevant when the audience is already assembled.