Last week in Milan, Gucci premiered a 33-minute short film called “The Tiger” in a custom-built theater. The film featured Spike Jonze as co-director, Demi Moore as the lead, and a cast including Ed Harris, Edward Norton, Kendall Jenner, and Keke Palmer. The budget likely exceeded what most brands spend on an entire year of marketing.
The Tiger is a bold, bonkers meditation on consumption and society that imagines an alternate universe where the Gucci family owns California. It pokes fun at luxury culture, consumer obsession, and even itself all while staying perfectly on brand.
This is the signal smart brands are paying attention to– which is the reality that template marketing can no longer generate the cultural impact that drives brand value. Gucci built a theater because creative distinction has become a business necessity in oversaturated attention markets.

The Death of Template Marketing
For the past decade, brand marketing followed predictable formulas. Lifestyle photography with natural lighting. User-generated content campaigns. Influencer partnerships with scripted authenticity. Email sequences following tested conversion patterns. Social media posts optimized for engagement metrics.
The playbook worked because it was new, then it worked because it was proven, and finally it worked because competitors were doing the same thing poorly. Now it doesn’t work because everyone is doing it identically.
We live in a world of creative fatigue. Scroll through Instagram and try to distinguish between brands in the same category. The aesthetic templates, copy frameworks, and campaign structures have become so standardized that brands have effectively erased their own differentiation.
The attention economy has reached a breaking point where traditional metrics have become meaningless:
- Average person sees 5,000+ brand messages daily
- Instagram users see 1,728 posts per day in their feed
- TikTok serves 200+ videos per user session
- Email inboxes receive 121 emails per day on average
In this environment, following best practices means guaranteed invisibility. The brands that cut through are those willing to abandon safe, tested approaches for creative conviction that generates earned media rather than paid reach.Subscribe
What The Tiger Reveals About Breaking Through
Gucci’s short film offers a masterclass in how creative storytelling, production quality, and bold narrative choices break through template fatigue. Here’s what makes it work:
Elevating the Brand Through Storytelling
The film sells Gucci through writing and perspective– not just logos and great clothes (although they did a fantastic job of styling the cast). The dialogue feels more like art or literature than advertising. It avoids formulaic delivery entirely.
This approach elevates Gucci into a brand that can reflect, joke about, and analyze itself without losing credibility. The brand becomes a cultural voice rather than a product pusher.
The lesson for your brand is that the brands who are winning are the ones who aren’t trying to control every frame and instead allow authentic, layered storytelling to carry the brand essence.
The Power of Mystery and Complexity
The film makes Gucci feel mysterious and worth engaging with. It doesn’t flatten the brand into a message, it makes it richer. By leaning into nuance and idiosyncrasies, Gucci becomes cultural commentary.
Most brands simplify themselves into emptiness trying to achieve clarity. Gucci does the opposite, building layers of meaning that people want to explore.
The question for businesses: Are you simplifying your brand to the point of emptiness, or are you building layers of meaning that people want to explore?
Self-Awareness Without Self-Destruction
The Tiger walks a fine line. It pokes fun, shows self-awareness, and engages with contemporary cultural themes, but it doesn’t feel preachy. The writing lets the audience make their own judgments. This gives Gucci credibility across audiences, even those skeptical of modern branding tropes.
The film engages cultural debates without being captured by them. It’s not trying to be “woke” or “anti-woke”—it’s being self-aware and culturally literate.
The insight here is that authentic brands can engage cultural conversations without letting those conversations define them entirely.
Style and Form as Brand Expression
The editing feels like a fashion video; fast, stylish, surreal. Scenes, cuts, and visuals carry Gucci’s DNA as much as the clothes do. This shows that form matters as much as content.
Every element of brand communication, from editing style to tone of voice, signals brand identity. When the delivery is lazy or formulaic, the brand feels lazy too. This was truly my favourite part of the movie which is that every scene from a colouring and background stand point was SO on brand. They looked like video versions of past ad campaigns, it was so well done.
Emotional Resonance Across Audiences
The film works because the writing is intelligent, not pandering. It respects the audience’s intelligence rather than talking down to them. It shows that smart, nuanced storytelling expands reach by treating audiences as discerning adults rather than demographic segments.
This is why The Tiger can connect with audiences far outside Gucci’s typical customer base. The cultural conversation it generates reaches people who might never buy Gucci but now understand what the brand represents.
The Earned Media Value Revolution
The smartest brands have shifted their primary success metric from impressions and conversions to earned media value (the monetary worth of organic conversation, press coverage, and cultural impact their content generates).
Gucci’s theater generated exponentially more earned media value than a traditional campaign with the same budget would have achieved. The cultural conversation, media coverage, and organic social sharing created brand value that compounds over time rather than disappearing after the media spend ends.
This metric rewards creative risk-taking over safe optimization. In oversaturated attention markets, earned media value becomes the only sustainable competitive advantage. Creative courage generates cultural relevance, which drives organic reach that no paid campaign can match.
The brands winning today (i.e. Dairy Boy, Rhode, Davids Protein) are prioritizing creative impact over marketing efficiency. They’re optimizing for earned media value, understanding that cultural relevance drives business results more effectively than traditional advertising metrics.
Breaking the Template: Other Brands Getting It Right
Gucci’s approach reveals a pattern among brands that understand the new rules. Luxury eyewear brand Gentle Monster provides another example of staying relevant by abandoning the standard playbook.
Recently, Gentle Monster dropped a 10-slide Instagram series featuring mind-bending CGI artistry that looks more like a high-concept art installation than product marketing. Each frame required the kind of creative investment that would have funded entire campaigns just five years ago. The products are barely visible… the creative concept takes complete precedence.
Like Gucci’s theater, this represents creative conviction over optimization. These brands recognize that in a world of template convergence, distinction through creative courage becomes the only path to breakthrough.
What Your Brand Can Learn
The lesson isn’t that every brand needs to hire Spike Jonze or create CGI masterpieces. The lesson is understanding that creative risk has become business necessity.
Avoid Formulaic Branding Audiences tune out clichés. The more your content looks like everyone else’s, the more invisible you become. Template approaches guarantee invisibility in oversaturated markets.
Build Mystery People value brands that feel complex and layered. Stop simplifying your brand into emptiness. Create depth that rewards engagement and exploration.
Form is Substance Editing, pacing, style, and tone all transmit brand values. Every element of your communication signals who you are. Make those signals intentional and distinctive.
Respect Intelligence Speak to people as discerning adults, not demographics. Smart, nuanced storytelling expands your reach. Pandering shrinks it.
Optimize for Earned Media Value Shift your primary metric from paid impressions to cultural conversation. Creative courage that generates organic discussion creates compounding brand value.
The Creative Courage Imperative
Most brands make creative decisions by committee, optimize for safety, and follow proven templates. They choose the aesthetic that tested well, the copy that performed in previous campaigns, and the format that competitors are using successfully.
This approach to safety is not only ineffective and diluted but it fails in a world where you’re fighting for eyeballs and attention. When everyone else optimizes for safety, creative conviction becomes the only path to earned media value and cultural breakthrough.
Why This Matters to You
Gucci didn’t build a theater to show off. They built it because template marketing can no longer generate the cultural impact that drives luxury brand value. Their investment in creative extremes reflects a fundamental market reality: in attention economies, distinction is the only sustainable strategy.
The brands that understand this shift are already optimizing for earned media value over traditional metrics. They’re investing in creative courage while their competitors optimize their way to invisibility, trying to spend “measured” and “safely.”
They recognize that in oversaturated markets, the choice isn’t between safe and risky creative but instead it’s between memorable and forgettable.
The creative arms race is in full swing. Ask yourself whether you can afford to remain invisible in a world where only the bold break through.
If your brand is struggling to break through, reply to this email and I’ll send you my 10×10 analysis framework so you can effectively audit leading brands online. This resource is a game changer.
P.S. Officially back in the office after some time off on a special break in Italy. I’ll be launching my October cohort for only 12 businesses, this 6 week cohort will be focused on all things Tiktok. In case you missed it Oracle took the winning bid and the application is being rebuilt on US soil. I have an article coming out on this tomorrow! This group of 12 businesses will be taught how to crush Tiktok so they are ahead for the new algorithm. if you’re interested, reply to this email and I’ll send you more information.
xx,
Camille
As always, I love helping small businesses win, whether that’s through my self-paced Social Media Masterclass here or through a 1:1, Direct discovery or working with my agency.