Key Takeaways:
- Beyoncé’s haircare brand, Cécred, launched its first campaign, blending cultural storytelling with emotional branding.
- The hero spot, directed by Campbell Addy, features a voiceover by Beyoncé and a visual essay on hair’s emotional and cultural weight.
- Cécred aims to position itself as more than a beauty brand — it’s a celebration of personal history and shared identity.
Beyoncé’s new haircare brand Cécred just released its first-ever campaign, and it’s not your typical beauty ad.
Created by Wieden+Kennedy New York, the ad titled "A Deeper Understanding of Hair" is a visually rich and emotionally grounded campaign that explores the meaning of hair beyond just beauty.
The launch is led by a 90-second hero film directed by British photographer and filmmaker Campbell Addy, known for his intimate, human-centered work.
Set to a voiceover by Beyoncé herself, the film showcases portraits of real people and their hair with a spoken-word meditation on the journeys tied to it — the frustrations, joys, memories, and meaning.
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The effect is both raw and reflective.
W+K NY Copywriter Funmi Adejobi expressed her excitement over the launch of the haircare brand:
"It all comes down to hair as more than just beautiful ornamentation," Adejobi shared.
"It’s emotional, personal, cultural, funny, tragic and triumphant — all of that and more. Because the story of our hair is the story of our lives.
Overall, the campaign's strong tagline echoes the idea that hair is about identity, connection, and healing.
Cécred, which launched last year, hopes to become a brand rooted in these deeper truths, promising science-backed care without losing sight of the cultural richness behind every strand.
As creative agencies continue to blur the line between commercial and cultural work, campaigns like this show how emotional stories rooted in reality can build powerful brand worlds.
Hair For Thought
Shot by Addy and produced by New School Represents, the film opens with stills and moving images of Black hair in its many forms: braided, straightened, free, and coiled.
Beyoncé’s iconic voice accompanies the mesmerizing imagery, speaking on the beauty and complexity of it all.
"Your hair has gone through quite the journey itself, hasn't it?" she asks the viewers.
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Rather than following a single narrative arc, the film then shifts into a documentary style, with the camera lingering on texture and detail, as different accounts reflect on their personal hair stories.
This storytelling approach creates an open, welcoming space: not just for one hair type or identity, but for anyone who has wrestled with what their hair says about them — to others, and to themselves.
The campaign favors realness over polish. There’s no glossy, unattainable glamour here — just honest visuals of people whose hair speaks volumes.
Previously, McDonald's and W+K NY launched a campaign celebrating 50 years of the Egg McMuffin.
Brands Bring Culture to the Forefront
Cécred’s campaign shows how brands can fuse cultural relevance with commercial storytelling. As more brands across beauty, fashion, and tech adopt culture-led campaigns, the focus is changing from product-first to purpose-driven narratives that better align with consumer values.
Ready to explore agencies that think outside the box? Check out our roster of the best creatives: