Let Marketing Dive’s free newsletter keep you informed, straight from your inbox.
The c-store chain is the first presenting sponsor of the pop-punk-focused When We Were Young as part of a bid to connect with consumers around culture.
7-Eleven is turning up the volume to eleven through its partnership with Live Nation. The partnership represents the first time the live entertainment company, which also includes Ticketmaster, has sold the naming rights to a U.S. festival. By securing its first-ever naming rights deal for a popular festival and activating at two others, the convenience store chain can put its brand at the center of culture and connection, according to Marissa Jarratt, executive vice president and chief marketing and sustainability officer at 7-Eleven.
“By teaming up with Live Nation, we’re bringing the 7-Eleven brand to the heart of unforgettable fan moments. We’re eager to recreate the fun and excitement that comes with visiting a 7-Eleven store in an immersive music experience for the next generation of brand fans,” Jarratt said in the press release.
When We Were Young Festival takes place Oct. 18-19 at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds and is headlined by pop-punk emo giants Panic! at the Disco, Blink-182 and Weezer. The 7-Eleven activation at the festival „channels early 2000s emo energy“ and could speak to the millennial consumers for whom this style of music is nostalgic.
The immersive, social-first activations are intended to be reminiscent of in-store experiences. The Slurpee Street at The Governors Ball (June 6-8 at Randall’s Island in New York) is inspired by a summer block party and includes a stoop and free Slurpees. A similar activation will appear at the hip-hop-focused Rolling Loud festival and nod to street art culture.
Music festivals are part of a music event market that was valued at more than $250 billion in 2023 and is forecast to grow to more than $775 billion by 2035, per an Allied Market Research report. As music festivals have proliferated, Live Nation’s slate — including genre-specific ones like When We Were Young and Rolling Loud — and major events like Goldenvoice’s Coachella have become heavy with brand activations as experiential marketing returns to pre-pandemic levels.
Unilever’s Dove this month iterated on its “Let Your Body Body” campaign with an effort that leveraged music festival season to promote the brand’s whole body deodorant line. Likewise, Scotch-Brite extended a musically focused campaign with a presence at Coachella.
Seven & i Holdings, parent company of 7-Eleven, announced in its latest earnings report that 7-Eleven’s same-store sales in the U.S. fell 2.7% in fiscal 2024 and are expected to contract by another 1.5% in fiscal 2025. The parent company last month announced plans for a U.S. IPO but is also evaluating a takeover bid from Alimentation Couche-Tard.
Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts
Nike’s first big game ad in 27 years and other purpose-driven spots won the night, while ads built on celebrities, humor and politics had an uneven showing.
The decision to not move forward with an opt-out option arose out of an “evolution” of the industry and regulatory environments, said a Google official.
Subscribe to Marketing Dive for top news, trends & analysis
Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts
Nike’s first big game ad in 27 years and other purpose-driven spots won the night, while ads built on celebrities, humor and politics had an uneven showing.
The decision to not move forward with an opt-out option arose out of an “evolution” of the industry and regulatory environments, said a Google official.
The free newsletter covering the top industry headlines