How Fashion Brands Are Winning the Winter Olympics
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 11 February 2026
⏱️ 24 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
While the Olympics remain one of the world’s biggest sporting stages, they are also one of the most tightly controlled marketing environments. Rules limit how sponsors can interact with athletes and advertise during the Games. As a result, fashion and sportswear brands are finding alternative ways to capitalise on the moment, from outfitting national teams and launching capsule collections to sending squads of influencers to experience the Games.
BoF correspondents Haley Crawford and Mike Sykes join Sheena Butler-Young and Brian Baskin on The Debrief to unpack how the winterwear boom is reshaping the Olympic marketing playbook.
Key Insights:
- Musician Bad Bunny’s choice of Zara for his Super Bowl halftime show outfit crystallises a broader tension in fashion marketing: the balance between cultural relevance and commercial perception. Whilst Sykes acknowledged the pushback from critics who found the use of a fast-fashion Spanish brand on such a global platform surprising, he also notes the strategic logic. “This performance is supposed to be about inclusivity, and part of that is accessibility and affordable products. And plus, Zara is also a Spanish brand... It makes more sense considering the cultural magnitude of the performance,” Sykes says.
- Crawford argues the Games are no longer just about logo placement on performance gear, but a broader spotlight on winter fashion as a growing category. “We've seen that consumers are interested, not only from a performance perspective, but also from a fashion-forward perspective, in having gear that's equally stylish as it is performance driven on the slopes,” she says. But Olympic marketing comes with strict limitations. As Crawford explains, official sponsors can use Olympic branding, but others must tread carefully. For non-sponsors like Canadian label Roots, that means linguistic gymnastics: using phrases like “rooting for Canada” without explicitly referencing the Games.
- With broadcast advertising and official branding tightly controlled, being visibly present at the Games can be the most direct route to global reach. Sykes points to Adidas’ scale: “We’ve seen a bunch of brands like Adidas…that launched this 700-piece collection.” Even if it is not a traditional campaign, the visibility is enormous. “Just to have your logos on some of these athletes as they perform, while millions of people are watching across the globe, that is the sort of marquee way we’re seeing brands participate,” he says.
- As leagues and federations try to expand their audiences, fashion-forward fan wear has become a strategic priority. Crawford says Off Season’s approach to Team USA illustrates the shift: rather than just jerseys, brands are creating “wearable jackets and sweaters and things that fans can actually wear in their day-to-day.” Sykes sees the trend as part of a wider evolution across sport. Off Season’s product “reminds me of what the Starter jackets used to be in the 90s,” he says, predicting that more brands will build momentum by “taking team logos and putting them on unique products that aren't just a jersey.”
- While the Olympic window is tightly controlled, brands often see their biggest opportunities once the closing ceremony ends. Crawford points to the Paris Olympics breakout star Ilona Maher, who “popped off for creating all this viral behind-the-scenes content in the Olympic village,” then landed deals with Maybelline and Paula’s Choice. For fashion, Suni Lee is a recent template. After Paris, she started campaigns for LoveShackFancy and Victoria’s Secret Pink and attended the CFDA Awards with a designer partner. “She really built this whole other part of her public persona,” Crawford says – showing how medals and momentum can translate into longer-term brand equity.
Additional Resources:
- How the Winterwear Boom Reshaped Fashion’s Olympic Playbook | BoF
- Which Winter Olympians Will Score Beauty Deals? | BoF
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion, where each week we delve |
| 0:12.0 | into our most popular B-O-F professional stories with the correspondents who created them. I'm |
| 0:17.4 | senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. And I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. |
| 0:22.6 | As athletes take to the ice rings of Milan and the mountains of Cortina, |
| 0:26.3 | fashion brands are entering a competition of their own. |
| 0:29.1 | The Winter Olympics have become one of the industry's most important global marketing moments, |
| 0:33.3 | especially as winterwear grows into a core commercial category. |
| 0:36.4 | But strict Olympic rules limit how brands can show up during the games, pushing many |
| 0:41.6 | to rely on unconventional methods ranging from outfitting the teams at the opening ceremonies |
| 0:46.4 | to telling post-game stories weeks or even months after the Olympics finish. |
| 0:51.7 | Joining us to unpack how brands are using the Winter Olympics as a marketing platform, |
| 0:56.5 | our reporters Haley Crawford and Mike Sykes. |
| 0:59.1 | Haley, Mike, welcome to the debrief. |
| 1:01.0 | Hi, Sheena. |
| 1:01.6 | Hi, Brian. |
| 1:02.1 | Thanks for having us. |
| 1:03.4 | Thanks for having us. |
| 1:04.9 | All right. |
| 1:05.3 | I know it says on the title of this episode we're talking Winter Olympics, |
| 1:08.5 | but I think we have to talk about the Super Bowl first. |
| 1:15.5 | So I have a question for you, Mike. I'm curious if you think Kenneth Walker winning MVP as a running back signifies a permanent shift away from the quarterback-centric value |
| 1:20.5 | model in the modern NFL, or is that just a byproduct of the Patriots failure to set the edge in the |
... |
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