Unilever stopped treating creators like banner ads. According to Digiday, the company built what it calls a "creator force"—a permanent infrastructure layer inside marketing, not a media channel managers activate for a quarter then forget. The shift matters because most brands still run creator campaigns as one-off transactions: find an influencer, pay for a post, move on. Unilever instead built systems to keep creators engaged across product cycles, gave them repeatable briefing formats, and embedded creator output into product development and retail execution. That structure is why their creator programs scale without turning into chaos.
The mechanics: Unilever created dedicated creator liaison roles inside brand teams, standardized contracts that allow multi-campaign engagement without re-negotiating terms, and built shared asset libraries so a creator's content flows directly into paid media, retail displays, and e-commerce pages. They also invited creators into product briefings before launch, treating them as early signal rather than late-stage amplification. The result is a system where a creator relationship compounds over time instead of resetting to zero every campaign.
Why it worked: Most brands lose 70% of their energy to the friction of each new creator deal—vetting, contracting, briefing, asset handoff. Unilever removed that friction by treating creators like an in-house capability. When a creator knows they'll work with you again, they invest more in understanding your product, your customer, and your retail reality. That depth shows up in content that doesn't feel like an ad read. It also means Unilever can move faster—no three-month sourcing process when a product needs social proof at launch. The infrastructure absorbed the transactional cost, so the brand teams could focus on creative direction and performance.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: You don't need Unilever's budget to run this play; you need their structure. Start by identifying three to five creators in your category who already use or could credibly use your product. Make them a standing offer: a quarterly retainer (\$500–\$2,000 depending on following) for two posts per quarter, plus first access to new SKUs and the ability to give input on packaging or product tweaks. Write the contract once, with auto-renewal unless either party opts out. That removes the re-negotiation tax. Build a shared Notion or Airtable doc where these creators can see your launch calendar, request samples, and submit content ideas. When they post, immediately pull the best assets into your paid ads, your Amazon A+ content, and your email. Track which creator's content drives the highest conversion and give them more product to test. Over two quarters, you'll have a small creator force that knows your brand deeply and produces content that performs better than anything you'd get from a one-off sponsorship. The cost: \$6,000–\$30,000 per year for three to five creators, plus product cost. The return: content that converts because it's rooted in real use, and a pipeline of social proof that refreshes every month without you starting from scratch.
The broader pattern: Infrastructure beats transactions when you're building anything that compounds. A creator who works with you once is a media buy. A creator who works with you four times is a brand asset. The brands winning in physical product right now are the ones who stopped chasing the biggest influencer for the single campaign and started building small, repeatable systems with creators who actually care about the product.
The takeaway
Treat three to five creators as a standing team with quarterly retainers and shared systems, not one-off campaign hires.
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.
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