Title: Samsung’s Creative Currency Shines at Cannes Publish Date: 7.3.2019 Category: Corporate Samsung Electronics America’s marketing and creative communications executives arrived in the South of France in June ready to inspire and learn from their influential counterparts from brands around the world, at the 2019 Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. The conference is an annual event where the marketing world’s best minds share key insights and learnings, predict future trends and are awarded for their most compelling work of the year. In panel and roundtable discussions over the five-day event in the iconic city of Cannes, Samsung executives described the company’s shift from product-centric to experience-driven marketing, passionately spoke to the importance of fostering equality and diversity within a company and shared key observations on successfully communicating with Generation Z. “If you want your brand to win with Gen Z, you’ve got to stop story-telling and you’ve got to start story-living,” said Michelle Crossan-Matos, Vice President of Strategy and Transformation at Samsung Electronics America, during the iHeartMedia & Publicis Media Lunch Panel with Ryan Seacrest. Gen Z was a hot topic of discussion at the festival, as brands look to capture mindshare of the youngest generation of consumers and creatives in the workplace. “The next generation doesn’t want talk. They want experiences, and they want technology that helps them live life to the fullest,” said Crossan-Matos. That ethos is reflected across many of Samsung’s recent award-winning marketing campaigns. Moving from targeting specific demographics and highlighting the products, Samsung’s marketing efforts of late have showcased a more holistic understanding of the role technology plays in consumers’ passions. The company’s focus on building communities around those consumer passion points has played a crucial part. Think gamers, creators and entrepreneurs, and even fitness-driven consumers. One notable example being Samsung’s best-in-class Note 9 launch last August, which included strategic partnerships: one with Fortnite, the trend-setting video game, to offer unique skins for playing the game exclusively on the Note 9 that boosted brand cache, and a music partnership with music trio “LSD” to release their hit “Thunderclouds” in conjunction with The Galaxy Note 9 smartphone ad titled “The Super Powerful Note.” According to Shazam and Billboard, “the song landed 304,000 Shazam tags in August,” as a result of the partnership, which was the largest total for any song on Billboard & Clio Music’s Top TV Commercials chart that month. https://youtu.be/BTKn3VHcMc8 Crossan-Matos pivoted to The Female Quotient panel discussion on “Leaders Who Inspire: The Impact of Having an Equality Mindset,” sharing exclusive insights into the creativity that organizational diversity can foster. “A leader inspires people to believe they can achieve anything,” Crossan-Matos shared. “It’s about democratizing opportunity, so that everyone on the team believes they can change the world for the better.” She leads by example: half of Crossan-Matos’ Samsung team is female. Michelle Engel, Head of Programming, Partnerships, Influencer and Talent for Samsung Electronics America, also made the rounds at Cannes, speaking about creative currency and building memorable partnerships that can also be monetized. “Samsung encourages and empowers creators to embrace their full identity, and we want to help them defy their barriers,” Engel said, echoing the brand’s values, which are embedded in the brand’s mantra, “Do What You Can’t.” At a roundtable discussion on “How to Unleash the Power of Influencers,” H.L. Ray, Samsung Electronics America Vice President of Marketing and Business Development, said brands are respected and appreciated for listening to their customers and communicating with them directly through social media. He talked about the importance of connecting with consumers via authentic and diverse influencer content. “We want to take our brand message, ‘Do What You Can’t,’ to a diverse group of influencer-partners and empower them to express themselves authentically – and inspire others,” Ray said.