Gap Inc. is betting big on entertainment as a path to cultural relevance, creating a new chief entertainment officer role dedicated to what it calls "fashiontainment,” a strategy that blurs the lines between content creation and commerce through partnerships across music, film, sports, and gaming.
"CEO Richard Dixon has been tasked with reinvigorating the Gap brand, as well as the other brands, Old Navy, Banana Republic, Athleta," said our analyst Sky Canaves on a recent "Reimagining Retail" episode. The move follows Dixon's successful turnaround at Mattel, where the "Barbie" movie became a cultural phenomenon that drove brand affinity and sales.
The new role sits above individual brand marketing teams, which will continue to handle creative vision, product direction, and campaigns for Gap, Old Navy, Banana Republic, and Athleta. This creates a high-level position focused on building partnerships and cultural moments rather than day-to-day marketing execution.
Recent successes hint at the potential.
"The role of the chief entertainment officer will be to think more broadly and how to link those viral moments to create a cohesive brand narrative or strategy that can capitalize on viral moments, but isn't solely dependent on them," Canaves said.
The distinction between a chief entertainment officer and a chief marketing officer remains unclear, raising questions about whether this is truly transformational or just another C-suite title variation.
"We've seen chief brand officers, chief digital officers, chief creative officers, chief growth officers, chief customer officer," said our analyst Blake Droesch. "This move runs the risk of being added to the long lineage of CMO adjacent C-suite jobs that aren't, at the end of the day, super entirely distinct."
The press release announcing the role specified that brand teams will continue leading creative vision and campaigns, suggesting the entertainment officer operates at a strategic level above tactical execution.
Gap faces intensified competition from online brands, dupes, and dispersed shopping channels that make maintaining customer loyalty increasingly difficult for mid-market mass brands.
"It's a fashion brand and there's so many fashion options,” said Canaves. “[Staying relevant] becomes ever more important for a brand like Gap that's a mid-market mass brand. It risks falling into the middle of not very special or casual brands that don't have a strong brand identity."
The company has shown momentum under Dixon's leadership, but growth has come primarily from value-focused Old Navy rather than the flagship Gap brand, which still needs to strengthen its core retail fundamentals alongside its entertainment ambitions.
“They still do have a lot of work to do in improving just the relevancy of the products that they offer and not to mention the online shopping experience,” said Droesch.
Measuring the impact of a brand-building role focused on long-term cultural relevance presents challenges, particularly in the first year of a new position.
The company will need to demonstrate that the investment justifies the expense of a new department and LA office, likely requiring at least one major cultural moment that drives measurable business impact.
While Gap’s scale may justify a standalone C-suite entertainment role, its ability to prove out the model will serve as a bellwether for how retailers of all sizes approach entertainment as a brand-building lever.
"Every brand should have a brand-building content strategy that has a strong entertainment or cultural component, whether it's capital 'E' entertainment like a Hollywood film or just telling brand stories through micro- and nano-influencers," Canaves said.
We prepared this article with the assistance of generative AI tools and stand behind its accuracy, quality, and originality.
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