Join our Waitlist for Expert Advice!

Three Affordable Ways to Get Celebrities to Promote Your Brand Hiring a celebrity spokesperson doesn't have to break the bank. Here are three, low-cost ways to involve celebrities in your business.

By Carol Tice Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Three Affordable Ways to Get Celebrities to Promote Your BrandHiring a celebrity spokesperson is a proven way to drive sales. It's also frightfully expensive and has the potential to backfire. Consider all of the brands that had Tiger Woods signed up as pitchman when his marital scandal hit and his golden career suddenly imploded.

A better way to go for many brands may be to get a celebrity to either use your product or even to just appear with your brand for a brief time. Here are three ways to involve celebrities in your business that are lower cost and have less downside risk if your chosen celeb has a breakdown:

Swag bags. Events that attract celebrities usually put together gift bags for attendees. The mother lode of all swag bags is coming up -- the Oscar show and attendant parties. This year's Oscar bag overflows with $75,000 in goodies, including a Kim Kardashian signature watch, beauty products, jewelry, and two different vacation trips. (The luxury swag is reportedly one reason nominees are always "just happy to be nominated.")

Swag providers know the cost of supplying those freebies is pin money compared to the sales boost they could get if even a single celebrity uses their products. There are scads of swag-bag donation opportunities each year, from local events to huge national ones. The hope here is also to get more than one star talking about your brand, which helps spread your risk if one of them enters rehab.

Direct mail. Some fashion companies try the direct approach, mailing out product samples directly to celebrities' representatives in hopes a celeb will later be snapped (and widely circulated in social media) using their product. This approach helped skyrocket startup fashion-watch company RumbaTime to over $1 million in sales their first year. They mass-mailed their watches out to oodles of style-conscious celebs, and their brightly colored watches were soon photographed on the wrists of Snoop Dogg, Jaime Pressly and others.

One-off celebrity appearances. It's much cheaper to hire a hot band to play your annual meeting, as Starbucks regularly does, than to hire them to pitch your brand year-round. But the glitter still rubs off and their presence gets you some extra spin. The Office's Rainn Wilson, a.k.a. Dwight Schrute, was brought in to heckle Adobe executives as they presented new products for a large trade-show audience.

This approach serves up a quick hit of celebrity sparkle -- the star is in, it's cool that they're doing something with your brand and then they're gone. Their personal-appearance fee is going to be a fraction of the cost of signing a famous name to a 12-month endorsement contract. If your chosen guest-celeb goes off the deep end a few months from now, the association with your company is looser and you're probably outside the collateral-damage zone.

You may think hiring a celebrity isn't in your budget no matter how you slice it -- but remember, there are all levels of celebrities. The host of your local news show or the chef of your town's hottest restaurant is big with your customers. They could probably give your brand plenty of buzz at a modest personal-appearance rate.

How will you promote your brand this year? Leave a comment and tell us your strategy.

Carol Tice

Owner of Make a Living Writing

Longtime Seattle business writer Carol Tice has written for Entrepreneur, Forbes, Delta Sky and many more. She writes the award-winning Make a Living Writing blog. Her new ebook for Oberlo is Crowdfunding for Entrepreneurs.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

You Have One Month Left to Buy a House, According to Barbara Corcoran. Here's Why.

"If you are planning on waiting a year and seeing where interest rates go, you are out of your mind," Corcoran said.

Business News

Meta Fires Employee Making $400,000 Per Year Over a $25 Meal Voucher Issue

Other staff members were fired for the same reason, per a new report.

Side Hustle

In Her Late 30s, She Pursued Another Creative Side Hustle — Then Turned It Into a Multimillion-Dollar Business

Gara Post had built one successful celebrity-magnet business before, so she decided to do it again.

Business News

These 3 Side Hustles Make the Most Money While Working Fewer Hours, According to a New Survey

The survey also found that having a side hustle doubled as a path to becoming more employable.

Franchise

The McRib Is Back, But Only at Select McDonald's — Here's Where to Find It

This scarcity is nothing new. In 2022, McDonald's announced a "Farewell Tour" for the McRib, suggesting that it might be the last time customers could get their hands on it.

Marketing

3 Reasons Your Marketing is Failing (And How to Fix It)

There are endless acronyms and "gurus" telling entrepreneurs how to market their businesses, which leads to frustration. Discover how to create a marketing strategy that works for your business.