Minnetonka, an 80-year-old footwear brand known for its moccasins, is expanding into clogs and ramping up creator partnerships to reach younger consumers, according to Modern Retail. The move comes as the company marks its anniversary by testing whether a heritage brand can add new silhouettes without alienating its existing base.
The brand is launching new product categories—clogs among them—while distributing pairs to creators who can demonstrate the product in context. According to Modern Retail, Minnetonka is pairing these silhouette launches with influencer seeding, sending product to content creators who already align with the brand's aesthetic rather than running broad paid campaigns. The logic: a clog worn by a creator in a styling video carries more conversion weight than a static ad.
This works because footwear adoption among younger buyers is driven by silhouette familiarity and social proof, not heritage. A Gen Z customer may not care that Minnetonka has been making moccasins since 1946, but will notice if three creators she follows post clogs in the same month. The expansion into a trending silhouette gives the brand a reason to be in those feeds without forcing a moccasin into a creator's wardrobe where it does not fit. The creator does the translation work—pairing the clog with an outfit, showing how it works in a routine—so the brand does not have to explain why an 80-year-old company is relevant.
The mechanism is category-driven seeding: you launch a product that fits current search and social trends, then seed it to creators whose audiences already shop that category. The product does not need to be revolutionary; it needs to be the right silhouette at the right time, placed with the right person. Minnetonka is not asking creators to sell moccasins to an audience that does not wear them. It is giving them a clog—a format Gen Z already understands—and letting the creator's styling do the work.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play on a tight budget. First, identify a trending silhouette or format in your category by checking TikTok search volume, Google Trends, and what Shopify top-sellers are launching. If you make bags, perhaps belt bags are spiking; if you make drinkware, perhaps a specific tumbler shape is moving. Launch or adapt one SKU to match that format. Second, build a list of 15 to 30 creators whose content already features that product type—not mega-influencers, but mid-tier accounts with 3,000 to 30,000 followers and consistent engagement. Third, send product with a one-line note: no script, no mandatory post, just a courtesy heads-up that they can share if they like it. Budget $500 to $1,500 in product cost and shipping. Track using UTM links or a creator-specific discount code, and measure conversion, not impressions. If three creators post and you see 20 to 50 orders in the following two weeks, double the list and repeat.
The broader pattern here is that heritage brands can access new demographics without rebranding if they lead with product expansion rather than messaging. Minnetonka is not trying to convince Gen Z that moccasins are cool again. It is introducing a silhouette Gen Z already wants, under a brand name that carries quality signaling, distributed through voices Gen Z already trusts. The next move for any brand in a similar position: find the format your new audience is already buying, make it, and let the right voices show it in context.
The takeaway
Launch a trending silhouette, seed it to mid-tier creators in that category, and let styling do the selling.
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