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Lexicon entryBrand strategy · Creative effectiveness

Fame Effects

The buzz, word-of-mouth, and shared-enthusiasm responses that emotional campaigns generate when they cross a threshold of cultural resonance — and the IPA Databank’s strongest empirical finding on creative effectiveness.

Direct answer

Fame effects are the buzz, word-of-mouth, and shared-enthusiasm responses that emotional campaigns generate when they cross a threshold of cultural resonance. They sit on the emotional spectrum but go further than emotional involvement alone — fame campaigns inspire consumers to talk about the brand to other consumers, amplifying media spend through unpaid distribution. In the IPA Effectiveness Databank, fame campaigns deliver 4× the ESOV efficiency of other campaign types.

The empirical multiplier on creative.

Fame campaigns are the rare class of work that turn audience members into amplifiers — and the data on what they buy, in profit and pricing power, is the strongest finding in the IPA Databank.

Fame campaigns generate a measurable broadening of effect across every category of business outcome studied. Annualised SOM growth per ten points of ESOV runs at roughly 1.4 for fame campaigns versus 0.4 for other types — a fourfold gap. Fame campaigns also produce the broadest profile of effects in the IPA dataset: 1.8 business effects on average versus 1.4, 2.1 brand effects versus 1.3, and 6.7 total effects versus 4.7.

ESOV efficiency vs other campaign types
+ price-sensitivity reduction vs non-fame

The mechanism is pricing. Fame campaigns more than double price-sensitivity reduction effects compared to non-fame campaigns — and pricing power, not volume, is the dominant driver of long-run profit growth. A brand that can hold or raise prices without losing volume captures profit that volume-led growth cannot match. Fame campaigns are the empirically validated path to that pricing position.

Fame effects peak at approximately two years and then begin to decline as the surprise that drives buzz wears off. Sustaining fame requires continuous creative renewal rather than reuse of a successful campaign. Axe / Lynx is the canonical example of a brand that sustained fame across a decade by refreshing the expression of a single underlying brand idea — a proven model for any brand whose creative has hit its first peak.

Fame is not a budget question.

Fame is not synonymous with creative scale. A small brand can generate fame with a sharp, surprising, distinctive creative idea — and the efficiency multiplier of fame is precisely what allows under-budgeted brands to outperform their share of voice. The diagnostic question is whether the creative idea is capable of generating buzz, not whether the media plan is large enough to manufacture it.

The fame test

1. Is the creative idea surprising enough to provoke conversation? 2. Is the brand asset distinctive enough to be recognised in word-of-mouth? 3. Is the campaign renewable — can the same idea be expressed in fresh ways for years?

If the answer to all three is “yes,” fame is achievable on the prospect’s current budget. If the answer is “no,” the constraint is the creative concept, not the spend — and increasing spend on a non-fame creative will compound the wrong work. The brief is the lever, not the budget.

Where this definition comes from.

Referenced in this entry
  1. Binet, L. & Field, P. The Long and the Short of It: Balancing Short and Long-Term Marketing Strategies. Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA), 2013. Based on 996 IPA Effectiveness Awards case studies.
  2. Binet, L. & Field, P. Media in Focus: Marketing Effectiveness in the Digital Era. IPA, 2017.
  3. Romaniuk, J. Building Distinctive Brand Assets. Oxford University Press, 2018. (For distinctive-asset reinforcement that sustains fame across cycles.)

Get a diagnosis

If your creative is competent but not contagious — if your campaigns get measured but never repeated — the fame ceiling is sitting in the brief, not the budget. Chris Gardner audits creative-effectiveness gaps personally. Findings translate into strategy — execution runs through LocaliQ when you’re ready.