Victoria's Secret invited creators with meaningful social reach to walk its 2024 Fashion Show alongside traditional models and celebrities, according to Glossy. The brand shifted from invitation-only celebrity exclusivity to a model that treats follower count as a participation credential. The move generated earned media across creator channels while the brand retained full creative control of the main broadcast.
The mechanics: Victoria's Secret extended runway slots to influencers and content creators based on demonstrated social audience size and engagement rates. Selected creators participated in the same production as contracted models, wore the same product, and appeared in the broadcast. The brand provided advance access, behind-the-scenes content opportunities, and formal inclusion in press materials. Creators posted their own content from rehearsals, backstage, and show day across their owned channels.
This worked because Victoria's Secret converted distribution from a cost line to a participation currency. Traditional fashion shows pay for celebrity appearances, media buys, and publicist placements to drive awareness. By credentialing creators as participants rather than paying them as spokespeople, the brand secured organic posting from accounts with existing audience trust. Each creator had an incentive to post frequently and favorably — they were featured talent, not hired endorsers. The brand multiplied its reach without corresponding media spend, and the creator posts carried higher engagement than paid placements because followers saw authentic participation, not sponsored content.
The underlying mechanism is access-for-distribution arbitrage. A fashion show has fixed production costs whether 50 or 150 people walk. Adding creators to the participant list costs nearly nothing in marginal expense but unlocks owned distribution across dozens of channels. The brand also de-risked content quality: creators who build audiences professionally produce higher-output content than casual attendees, and their economic interest in maintaining follower engagement ensures they post prolifically.
Small physical-product brands can run the same play at local scale. If you manufacture a tangible product and host any kind of launch, pop-up, or showcase event, credential micro-influencers as participants rather than guests. A candle brand hosting a 20-person evening event invites 5 local creators with 5,000 to 15,000 followers, gives them early access to the space, includes them in the event program as featured participants, and provides product they can showcase during the event. The creators post because they were included, not because they were paid. A apparel brand running a sample sale offers 3 creators first-access appointments before public doors open, photographs them wearing the product in-store, and features their images in event marketing. The creators post their access and finds because exclusivity is the content.
The execution is straightforward. Identify 5-10 creators in your category or region with 3,000 to 50,000 followers and engagement rates above 2%. Send a direct message or email: "We're hosting [event] on [date]. We have [number] participant slots for creators. If you'd like to attend as featured [participant type], reply by [date]." Specify what participation includes: early access, product, inclusion in event materials. Specify what you expect: posting during and after the event, tagging your brand. No payment, no formal sponsorship disclosure required if they are genuinely participants. Confirm 3-5 creators, send calendar holds and logistics, provide product or access as promised. Capture content yourself of the creators at the event for your own channels. Track their posts and aggregate reach.
Cost for a small brand: $0 in creator fees, product cost only, perhaps $50-$150 in incremental product depending on category. A creator walking away with $30 in cost-of-goods candle or $75 in apparel samples is immaterial to the brand's unit economics but material to the creator's content calendar. The brand earns 10-20 posts across creator channels, reaching 50,000 to 200,000 combined impressions, without media spend. The posts carry implicit endorsement because the creators were included, not paid.
This model works for any product with visual appeal and any event structure: a food brand at a tasting, a home goods brand at a showroom opening, a wellness brand at a workshop. The common thread is converting event participation from pure cost to a distribution asset by credentialing creators as participants. The brand retains creative control, incurs no media cost, and earns authentic content from accounts with existing audience relationships. Victoria's Secret scaled the play to a global broadcast; a solo founder runs it at a 15-person local event with the same underlying mechanism.
The takeaway
Credential creators as event participants, not paid guests, to convert access into owned distribution at zero media cost.
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