Many brands have described themselves or their products as some variation of “demure,” “mindful” or “cutesy” over the past week, whether in marketing email subject lines, the comments sections of TikTok videos or social media posts following beauty creator Jools Lebron’s viral TikTok on “how to be demure and modest and respectful at the workplace.”
As of this writing, Lebron’s video has amassed 43 million views and more than 4.2 million likes, and has generated a 53% engagement rate—roughly 50 times the average industry benchmark of 1.37%—per Sprout Social data. And she’s racked up tens of millions of additional views and thousands of new followers since that initial video thrust her into the internet spotlight, with her videos now each drawing an average of 1 million views and an engagement rate of over 10%, according to data from influencer marketing platform Captiv8.
Now, major brands including Verizon, Netflix, Zillow and Lyft are rushing to capitalize on Lebron’s soaring online fame and taking their “demurity” a step further through collaborations with “Miss Demure” herself. Smaller brands such as Patrick Ta Beauty and GT’s Living Foods have also partnered with Lebron, though they’ve opted for influencer events and gifted products over more formal paid partnerships.
Read more about the TikTok trend here
Verizon was the first to ink a brand deal with Lebron involving sponsored social content, collaborating with her on a video of Lebron trading in her “musty” and “crusty” phone for a new (and more demure) model. The video came together in just four days, progressing quickly from Verizon’s initial outreach to Lebron on Aug. 16, to a content shoot at a Los Angeles Verizon store the following day and finally to Lebron’s sponsored TikTok video posted on Monday, Verizon Chief Marketing Officer Leslie Berland said in an email.