BooHoo wanted to own the US Gen Z market. REACH built the creator infrastructure that made it possible: the right people, the right content, and a social presence that put BooHoo inside every scroll.
BooHoo is a powerhouse in the UK fast-fashion space, but the US market is a different animal. American Gen Z does not respond to traditional advertising. They follow people, not brands. They buy what they see their favorite creators wearing, not what is in a banner ad.
The mandate was direct: find the creators who set trends in the US, put BooHoo in their hands, and build the kind of organic presence that transforms a UK label into a wardrobe staple for college-aged Americans.
REACH designed and executed an experiential influencer activation centered around BooHoo's Melrose showroom. We curated an immersive, in-person shopping experience for 45+ Gen Z college creators -- sourcing and hosting emerging influencers, immersing them in the brand through interactive elements, and prioritizing organic content creation over transactional posting.
The activation drove 300+ pieces of organic UGC across OOTD, BTS, and lifestyle formats -- significant buzz without a single mandatory deliverable. The result: a scalable model for authentic influencer relationships and long-term brand advocacy.
Gen Z does not respond to brands. They respond to people. REACH gave BooHoo the people.
Gen Z creators (10K+ followers) immersed in the Melrose showroom experience
OOTD, BTS, and lifestyle content produced without a single contracted deliverable
Established a framework for authentic influencer relationships and long-term brand advocacy
The conventional play in fashion influencer marketing is to spend big on a few macro creators and hope for a viral moment. REACH went the other direction: build a deep bench of nano and micro creators with hyper-engaged niche audiences, and let authentic trust do what paid reach cannot.
Creators with 10K to 100K followers consistently outperform larger accounts on purchase intent. Their audiences buy what they recommend because the recommendation feels like one from a friend, not a paid spokesperson. That trust compounds when you show up in enough feeds at once.