Benjamin Li
Oct 11, 2010

Lee Kum Kee debuts traditional sauce industry's first-ever new media marketing campaign

SHANGHAI - 123-year-old home-grown brand Lee Kum Kee has become the first local condiment marketer to launch a digital marketing campaign to showcase its fashion show at the “Style Hong Kong Show” in Shanghai this month.

image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading
image.Heading

Venue in Shanghai

image.Heading

Promotions in Shanghai

image.Heading

Promotions in Shanghai

image.Heading

Promotions in Shanghai

image.Heading

Promotions in Shanghai

image.Heading

Students setting up booths in Hong Kong

image.Heading

Students setting up booths in Hong Kong

image.Heading

Students setting up booths in Hong Kong

image.Heading

Venue in Shanghai

The brand is hosting the sauce and condiment industry's first ever fashion competition in cooperation with the Hong Kong Trade Development Council, which is running the Style Hong Kong Show in Shanghai from 15-19 October in conjunction with the closing of the Shanghai Expo.

Through the campaign, Lee Kum Kee hopes to position itself as a luxury and premium brand, especially in China.

"We have this idea because we would like to target and engage young generation. Fashion is trend, style and innovation which are the brand personalities of Lee Kum Kee," explained Anthony Chan, corporate communications manager, Lee Kum Kee International Holdings Limited.

This campaign looks to target fashionistas and fashion design students, with the internet as their "library" and "advisor".

"To emphasize Lee Kum Kee is a sauce and condiment rather than fashion brand, we used Taste of Style as the theme. Through the colour, layers and fabrics on the outfits, we would like to stimulate the taste buds of fashionistas," Chan added.

The company invited 50 fashion design students from Hong Kong Polytechnic University and Raffles College to use the brand elements to design an outfit. The company selected three students and sponsored them to produce the outfits and the whole process was made into a Project Runway-type video.

To create buzz, the video has been uploaded onto YouTube and Tudou. The campaign is uploading photos and posting comments in Facebook, Flickr and Kaixin, and distributing online releases to bloggers, online fashionistas and trend setters in Hong Kong and China.

A dedicated website www.LKK.com/fashion will also go live this afternoon.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

8 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Sofia Yip, Edelman

A skillful and adaptable leader, Yip's ability to transition between corporate and marketing realms has been transformative in boosting Edelman’s stature and business to new heights.

9 hours ago

Hylink CEO Su Tong resigns amid alleged market ...

The prolific founder and CEO stepped down to "safeguard the company’s reputation and ensure operational continuity" as the allegations are investigated.

9 hours ago

The risks and opportunities of Red's international fame

Amid a looming TikTok ban, Chinese social-media app Red is enjoying a sharp increase in users. But China’s marketing community view the phenomenon as a double-edged sword.

9 hours ago

Move and win roundup: Week of January 20, 2025

Initiative, FleishmanHillard, Jaywing, AirWallex and more in our weekly collection of people moves and account news.