Loro Piana sold 600 pairs of sneakers in a matter of hours.

According to Forbes, it was the fastest-selling product in the century-old brand’s history.

And it didn’t come from a traditional campaign or classic influencer marketing.

It came from a product-development collaboration with a cultural satire account on Instagram.

Gstaad Guy has 1.1M followers
→ According to Forbes, it’s the account with the highest concentration of high-net-worth individuals on social media

The numbers behind the brand’s rejuvenation

Google Trends for Loro Piana: +900% since 2019 — the growth curve starts exactly when Gstaad Guy begins featuring the brand
Average customer age: dropped to 35–40
Engagement rate: 6.35% (vs. 1–2% for luxury influencers)
Audemars Piguet: doubled revenue in five years to USD 2.2B, growing ~25% while the category grew 4%
Loro Piana revenue: €700M (2012) → €1B+ (2019)

How he did it

Depth over reach
He satirizes ultra-specific first-world problems that only resonate with people who frequent Gstaad, Monaco, and Mayfair. The humor filters the audience.

Narrative over selling
Constance (old-money European aristocracy) wears Loro Piana because that’s what she would wear.
Colton (new-money Gen Z) wears Audemars Piguet.
The brands are characters in a story — not ads.

Intimate event over billboard
“I’m not a giant billboard on the highway. I’m an intimate event.”
The exact opposite logic of traditional influencer marketing.

The community-led growth flywheel

→ Creator speaks to an ultra-specific niche
→ That niche is exactly the brand’s target audience
→ Brand gains cultural relevance without looking try-hard
→ Aspirational audiences observe and desire
→ Brand rejuvenates without losing its codes
→ Creator gains legitimacy
→ Creator attracts more of the same niche
→ Repeat

The problem this solved

Loro Piana (100 years old) and Audemars Piguet (150 years old) were heritage brands with no real conversation with the next generation.

A cultural satire account fixed that.

Four key lessons

Right audience > big audience
1.1M followers is small by mega-influencer standards. But if those people buy USD 50k watches, the number doesn’t matter.

Entertainment > advertising
Humor videos generate 1,200% more shares than text-and-image posts. Nobody shares ads. Everyone shares a joke.

The ambassador as a cultural product
Gstaad Guy doesn’t just wear the brand. He is the brand in content form. The partnership isn’t transactional — it’s symbiotic.

Community as a moat
People don’t follow for product reviews. They follow for belonging. Brands that enter the universe gain access — not just impressions.

If you still think there are no new spaces for your business to grow, you’re completely wrong

Tim Williams

Tim Williams

Creative Director

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