4 Exceptional Content Lessons From Getty Images & Lean In

This image col­lec­tion illus­trates ways every brand can approach con­tent, con­tent cura­tion, trends, audi­ence research, and sto­ry­telling.

Lisa Williams By Lisa Williams from Sustainable Digital Marketing. Join the discussion » 0 comments

On the one year anniver­sary of launch­ing the Get­ty Images and Lean In Col­lec­tion, it’s a great time to reflect on why this visu­al col­lec­tion of a mod­ern, more empow­ered woman was so suc­cess­ful. As brands strug­gle to find their sto­ry, this col­lec­tion illus­trates ways every brand can approach con­tent, con­tent cura­tion, trends, audi­ence research, and sto­ry­telling to reach their cus­tomers.


What Is The Lean In Collection?

Get­ty Images and LeanIn col­lab­o­rat­ed to cre­ate a library of images that depict­ed pow­er­ful women, girls, and those who sup­port them and their quest to lead. Their goal of visu­al­iz­ing female lead­er­ship in work and in life has been wild­ly suc­cess­ful.

The Lean In col­lec­tion has been licensed in more than 65 coun­tries, sales have dou­bled, and the col­lec­tion has grown from 2,500 images to near­ly 5,000.

Here are four things brands can learn from the con­tent mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy used by the Get­ty Images Lean In Col­lec­tion.

1. Leverage Curation

When the col­lec­tion launched, near­ly 60 per­cent of the images curat­ed for this pop­u­lar col­lec­tion already exist­ed in the Get­ty Images archives. It’s not that the empow­er­ing images did­n’t exist, it’s that they need­ed to be curat­ed in a way that could tell a more accu­rate sto­ry.

Cura­tion is a pow­er­ful sto­ry­telling mech­a­nism. Doing a con­tent audit to first estab­lish what you have can help you iden­ti­fy trends, inside and out­side of your brand, to tell a more impor­tant sto­ry.

2. Focus on Trends

Pamela Gross­man, direc­tor of visu­al trends for Get­ty Images, has an uncan­ny knack for under­stand­ing the sur­fac­ing of trends and get­ting ahead of it to help her team pro­vide the imagery that sup­ports cur­rent think­ing and ideas.

The col­lab­o­ra­tion between Get­ty Images and LeanIn.org was­n’t hap­pen­stance, it was forged by the cre­ative team (which employ a psy­chol­o­gist) to help under­stand the desires and emo­tions dri­ving peo­ple as they work, play and make sense of their world. Focus­ing on this trend, the under­stand­ing that women are 50 per­cent of the work­force but take only 14 per­cent of lead­er­ship posi­tion, allowed the Lean In orga­ni­za­tion to craft a sto­ry with visu­als that told a nar­ra­tive many peo­ple felt was­n’t get­ting told.

3. Know Your Audience

Get­ty Images audi­ence is var­ied, but a core tar­get seg­ment is brand man­agers. Brand man­agers can’t afford to get it wrong. Just ask Urban Out­fit­ters, which tried to reach their col­lege-age audi­ence by sell­ing a blood-spat­tered Kent State Uni­ver­si­ty sweat­shirt that marked the 1970 deaths of four stu­dents who died in protest of the war. Their “vin­tage” col­lec­tion was care­less, thought­less, and received a great deal of back­lash.

This Get­ty Images col­lec­tion helped brand man­agers and cre­atives find the images they need to depict the real­i­ty of being a pro­fes­sion­al, a woman, a moth­er and all the jobs and duties asso­ci­at­ed with that role if they want to con­nect with their audi­ences.

4. Be Inspiring

Sheryl Sand­berg’s book, “Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead” is less a man­u­script on lev­el­ing the play­ing field for women and more of a move­ment. The web­site, LeanIn.org, and the sup­port­ing doc­u­men­ta­tion includ­ing Lean In Sto­ries and direc­tions for run­ning Lean In Cir­cles don’t just tell but show how women and men are advanc­ing the desire for equal­i­ty.

Cre­at­ing con­tent for the pur­pose of cre­at­ing con­tent is a waste of time. Unless your con­tent inspires and moves peo­ple to dis­cus­sion and action it is worth­less. Read­ers and cus­tomers are bom­bard­ed by more than 16,000 visu­al images/messages every day. Your cus­tomers are over­whelmed by data, sto­ries, and imagery. View Momentology's Content Marketing Guide

This col­lab­o­ra­tive com­mer­cial effort also has a cause mar­ket­ing ele­ment, a por­tion of the pro­ceeds from the Lean In Col­lec­tion goes toward the cre­ation of Get­ty Images grants for images show­cas­ing female empow­er­ment and to sup­port­ing the Lean In mis­sion.

The suc­cess of the Get­ty Images Lean In Col­lec­tion is due in part to the fact that it inspired gen­er­a­tions of women and men to rethink how they see women. A cou­ple of years ago a Google search for “pro­fes­sion­al busi­ness woman” would have returned images of young, sexy women car­ry­ing brief­cas­es. Now the same search returns more real­is­tic imagery of real women in dif­fer­ent pro­fes­sions, of dif­fer­ent ages, in dif­fer­ent styles of cloth­ing, in dif­fer­ent roles which more accu­rate­ly depict the role and real­i­ty of a woman.

The biggest way these brands col­lab­o­rat­ed to inspire? They told the truth.

Takeaways

  • Exam­ine the con­tent you already have. Cura­tion is a pow­er­ful form of sto­ry­telling.
  • Under­stand trends. What are your cus­tomers talk­ing about? What keeps them up at night? Unless you’re shar­ing real solu­tions to real prob­lems and par­tic­i­pat­ing in the con­ver­sa­tion your sto­ry will just be noise.
  • Your sto­ry­telling can’t begin until you under­stand your audi­ence. Don’t try to boil the ocean, it’s not nec­es­sary to reach every­one. Focus intent­ly on your tar­get mar­ket and what they care about if you want to con­nect.
  • Lead the con­ver­sa­tion. As a brand you can’t just par­tic­i­pate in the con­ver­sa­tion. Be inno­v­a­tive and inspir­ing, then get out of the way and let your cus­tomers par­tic­i­pate in the sto­ry­telling. Tell the truths that are dif­fi­cult to share and let the sto­ry unfold with the help of your best cus­tomers.
Lisa Williams

Written by Lisa Williams

President, Sustainable Digital Marketing

Lisa Williams is the President of Sustainable Digital Marketing. She is a 19-year veteran of online marketing and has been featured in Kiplinger Magazine, Glamour Magazine, Boston Globe and The Oregonian. She recently authored her first book, "When Everybody Clicks: Sustainable Digital Marketing". Lisa is on the SEMpdx (Search Engine Marketing Professionals of Portland Oregon) Advisory Board. She speaks at regional, national and international conferences on the topics of digital strategy, marketing integration, team development and leadership. She is available for training and consulting.

Inked is published by Linkdex, the SEO platform of choice for professional marketers.

Discover why brands and agencies choose Linkdex

  • Get started fast with easy onboarding & training
  • Import and connect data from other platforms
  • Scale with your business, websites and markets
  • Up-skill teams with training & accreditation
  • Build workflows with tasks, reporting and alerts

Get a free induction and experience of Linkdex.

Just fill out this form, and one of our team members will get in touch to arrange your own, personalised demo.