According to Lefty's A Year in Data 2023 report, first place goes to the Cannes Film Festival, which regained its pre-pandemic visibility this year, while Louis Vuitton got the attention of the entire sector with its men's spring-summer 2024 show by Pharrell Williams
Which designers, brands, influencers or events will forever be associated with the year 2023?
That's the question influencer marketing platform Lefty and brand-building agency Karla Otto have tried to answer in a report that looks back at the fashion highlights of the last 12 months. And first place goes to the Cannes Film Festival, which regained its pre-pandemic visibility this year, while Louis Vuitton got the attention of the entire sector with its men's spring-summer 2024 show by Pharrell Williams.
Every year, fashion houses pull out all the stops in a bid to one-up one another with inventiveness in order to stand out in the eyes of an ever more demanding public, whether in person or on social networks. The result is a series of events, each more spectacular than the previous. But who came out on top in 2023? It all depends on the type of event, according to Lefty's A Year in Data 2023 report, produced in partnership with Karla Otto. The report presents an analysis of the impact of key opinion leaders in several sectors, including fashion, beauty and watch & jewelry, based in particular on Earned Media Value (EMV), calculated by estimating the number of impressions for each Instagram publication (regular posts, videos and carousels) and associating a Cost Per Mille (CPM/CPT) of $100.
After years of being a mere shadow of its glory days due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the Cannes Film Festival seems to have regained its heady, legendary aura for its 76th edition, held May 16-27. According to the report, its Earned Media Value (EMV) this year is estimated at some 413 million dollars, with a red carpet and big names. Cannes Film Festival returned to its pre-pandemic glory, bursting with A-List stars and blockbuster previews. Its lucrative EMV of $413M, due to an increased social media presence, means brands are not only designing for the screen, but cashing in on the cultural cache of Cannes," note the authors of the report.
Also read: Bourgeois, ladylike, '90s: Fashion trends that defined 2023