HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesStoryboard | Can marketers conquer Space?

Storyboard | Can marketers conquer Space?

Brands have gone to Space before, but a new age of Space travel and tourism could provide more opportunities to hitch a ride.

October 08, 2021 / 13:46 IST
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Austrian skydiver Felix Baumgartner dropping from near-Space (23 miles high) back to the Earth’s surface in 2012, sent Red Bull's sales through the roof. The brand spent $30 million on the Stratos project, and ended up hitting the $500 million mark in sales. (Image: Red Bull)
Austrian skydiver Felix Baumgartner dropping from near-Space (23 miles high) back to the Earth’s surface in 2012, sent Red Bull's sales through the roof. The brand spent $30 million on the Stratos project, and ended up hitting the $500 million mark in sales. (Image: Red Bull)

It was July 21, 1969. Apollo 11, the spaceflight that first landed humans on the Moon, also took along Swiss watch maker Omega's Speedmaster Moonwatch. Astronauts on that mission were spotted wearing the iconic watch. Omega worked closely with American Space agency NASA for five years to test and make a Space-fit chronograph. In the early 1960s, Swedish camera manufacturer Hasselblad also collaborated with NASA to modify and refine cameras suitable for various Space projects. Those captures gave the brand confidence to develop the first camera that landed on the moon and took the iconic photos that are now a part of history.

Omega and Hasselblad worked closely with NASA ahead of the 1969 Moonlanding.

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Some brands want to be positioned “out of this world”. In 2012, Austrian skydiver Felix Baumgartner dropped from near-Space (23 miles high) back to the Earth’s surface. This mission that hit stratospheric heights, literally, was funded and created by energy drink Red Bull; $30 million was spent on the Stratos project, which Red Bull refused to label as ‘ad campaign’. Back then, Red Bull sales went through the roof, hitting the $500 million in sales mark.

Over the years, brands have also looked to Space to create Instagrammable moments on Earth. Last year, American beauty brand Estee Lauder sent ten bottles of its Night Repair serum to the International Space Station, where astronauts took pictures of the bottle with the cosmos as a backdrop. According to reports, the company paid NASA roughly $128,000 for the photo shoot.