Mike's Hard Lemonade and Genesis both built custom campaigns around Netflix's limited series *The Hawk*, according to Marketing Dive. Neither brand ran traditional interruption ads. Instead, Mike's Hard sponsored a branded viewing hub and an experiential activation tied to the show's theme, while Genesis integrated vehicle placement and post-show content. Netflix reported the streamer added 18.9 million global subscribers in Q4 2024 and now counts 94.3 million monthly active users on its ad-supported tier, per the same source. The platform does not sell standard pre-roll inventory. Every advertiser builds a bespoke integration or walks.
Mike's Hard created a branded "Hawk Lounge" streaming hub within Netflix's interface and a physical pop-up bar in New York themed to the show's setting, according to the report. Genesis placed vehicles on-screen in multiple episodes and produced a companion piece featuring cast interviews shot around the brand's SUV lineup. Both campaigns ran across Netflix's owned social channels and email to the ad-tier subscriber base. Marketing Dive cited Netflix's head of US and Canada advertising sales, who confirmed the platform prioritizes "custom creative partnerships" over programmatic buys.
The mechanism works because Netflix controls distribution, content, and the first-party relationship with the viewer. A brand cannot interrupt; it must inhabit. The viewer opted into the ad tier to lower subscription cost, so tolerance for marketing exists — but only if the brand adds to the experience or stays inside the world of the show. Mike's Hard extended the *Hawk* universe with a physical venue and a digital destination. Genesis embedded product into the narrative frame itself. Neither asked the viewer to stop watching. Both asked the viewer to notice while watching.
The steal for a physical-product brand with a modest budget: identify a tentpole release on Netflix (or Hulu, Prime Video) in your category's emotional lane, then build a parallel activation that extends the show's world with your product at the center. If you sell outdoor gear and Netflix drops a survival docuseries, create a sweepstakes where entrants submit their own survival kit photo featuring your product, winner gets a custom kit worth $500. Promote it on owned channels and tag the show. If you sell barware and a mixology competition series launches, produce a 60-second recipe video using your glassware, styled to match the show's aesthetic, and pitch it to the show's social team as fan content. Cost: $200 for a freelance videographer, $100 for props. The platform may repost it; the audience will associate your product with the show's credibility.
Alternatively, license a minor character prop. Netflix production teams source physical goods for set dressing. If your product fits the show's world — vintage luggage, specialty coffee mugs, branded apparel — reach the production designer through the studio's vendor portal six months before release. Offer product at cost in exchange for on-screen placement and a co-marketing clause. When the show drops, run paid social with stills of your product in the scene and a 15% off code. A $2,000 product donation and $1,500 media spend can generate $20,000 in attributed revenue if the show finds an audience, according to case studies from smaller DTC brands reported in trade press.
The broader pattern: as streaming platforms reject interruption inventory, brand budget flows to integration, and integration requires a physical product that can live inside content or extend it into the real world. The brands that win are the ones that stop buying attention and start building it into the frame.
The takeaway
Netflix won't sell you a pre-roll, so build a product placement, a branded hub, or a real-world extension of the show's universe.
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