Social Media Analysis Shows Nike Scored a Major Win With Kaepernick Ad

Social Media Analysis Shows Nike Scored a Major Win With Kaepernick Ad

By looking at the online conversations surrounding Nike and their Kaepernick ad, we can see that Nike knew exactly what they were doing. Was it a calculated risk? By looking at social media audiences discussing the campaign, and Nike’s conversation overall, we can go further than the surveys to showcase how brilliant the marketing move truly is. Looking at the general Nike conversation, Nike’s core audience is young, with only 25 percent of people discussing Nike online being 35 or older. Comparing Nike’s audience to the groups of consumers positively and negatively posting about the Kaepernick campaign reveals something fundamentally important: the people who spoke positively about the ad were much more in line with Nike’s target audience. The age breakdown is slightly different than in Nike’s overall audience, but compared to those posting negatively about the ad (below), the positive group is much younger. The negative group, conversely, has very different interests than Nike’s core audience. A 30 percent increase in sales following the release of the advertisement. Almost 1 million posts in that day alone off of the ad is enough to warrant the money they were paying Kaepernick to feature in it. Nike did everything right with this ad.

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The people burning their Nikes weren’t buying many shoes anyway but those who support the ad are the people Nike anticipates will buy shoes for decades to come.

Social Media Analysis Shows Nike Scored a Major Win With Kaepernick Ad

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On the 30th anniversary of the iconic Just Do It slogan, Nike released an advertisement featuring a black-and-white image of Colin Kaepernick with the text “Believe in something. Even if it means sacrificing everything.” Within minutes, social media was abuzz with reaction. The ad went viral.

The social media firestorm was a mix of praise and criticism towards Nike. Some applauded the company for taking a stand while others went so far as burning their Nike apparel to start a #BoycottNike movement.

An ad that causes (previously) loyal customers to burn the company’s products is rarely called a success, but with Nike few things are ever that simple. Nike must have known that hiring the face of the most controversial movement in the NFL was going to cause an online maelstrom. So why take the risk? Why set yourself up to lose an entire demographic?

Because that group never mattered to you anyway.

By looking at the online conversations surrounding Nike and their Kaepernick ad, we can see that Nike knew exactly what they were doing. Was it a calculated risk? Sure, but with the emphasis firmly on “calculated.”

Related: 5 of the Most Controversial Ads in Recent History

Will Nike’s real audience please stand up?

Surveys show that younger, liberal audiences prefer companies to take a stance on important issues. Nike’s core audience is disproportionately young and more liberal than average, so the brand had good reason to believe that a bold, politically-minded ad would ultimately have a positive impact on its core audience.

But this is…

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