How Canterbury generated 1.8m reach for the British & Irish Lions
Brand Snapshot
Canterbury has been part of rugby for so long, the brand is one of those names you grow up with.
Maybe it was the first kit you wore at school, maybe it was the jersey your parents bought before a big match, or maybe it’s still the stuff you throw on for training.
They’ve been involved at every level of the game, from muddy community pitches right up to the huge international fixtures.
The company itself is only between 201-500 people, but they’ve managed to stay firmly rooted in the rugby world.
Their audience is anyone who loves the sport: kids just starting out, weekend warriors, die-hard fans who’ve followed the same team their whole life.
What ties all these people together is the same set of values rugby is built on: tradition, honesty, community, and a sense of belonging.
That’s why Canterbury stands out. Their kit isn’t just another bit of sportswear, it feels like part of the sport’s history and tradition.
They’ve earned trust across professional teams and grassroots sides, and they’ve been a big part of bridging the gap as women’s rugby continues to grow at speed.
For fans, the shirt isn’t just something you buy, it’s something you feel part of.
The British & Irish Lions squad announcement is always a major moment in the rugby calendar, and Canterbury wanted to make sure people didn’t just watch it, they wanted them to feel it.
They wanted fans, especially younger audiences, to share that pride, put on the jersey, and be part of something bigger.
That’s where influencer marketing came in.
The Challenge

Before they made the shift, Canterbury found themselves at a crossroads.
They had heritage, credibility, and a huge legacy behind them.
But visibility among younger audiences and even among casual rugby fans needed a boost.
With the world of sport ever-evolving, Canterbury wanted to make sure they stayed on people’s minds, particularly during major moments like the Lions announcement.
The main challenges were:
1. Growing their online presence
The brand wanted to reach beyond the traditional rugby crowd and get more people excited about the shirt, the squad, and what it represents. They needed fresh visibility in a crowded space.
2. Creating inspiring, fan-led content
Supporters aren’t just looking for official imagery anymore, they want real people showing real reactions. Canterbury wanted content that felt genuine, not overly branded.
3. Reconnecting with younger fans
Rugby is evolving, and the next generation consumes the sport differently. Canterbury knew this was the moment to make younger audiences feel part of the Lions story.
4. Building a bigger library of authentic assets
They needed more depth, more variety, and content that didn’t expire after a single campaign.
The “before” feeling was that they were doing good work, but not reaching as far or as deeply as they could.
They wanted every fan across the four nations to feel directly connected to the squad announcement, that sense of belonging the Lions are known for.
Something had to shift.
The Turning Point
The real switch came when the team realised that traditional content alone wasn’t enough. They needed something more dynamic and more fan-led.
They wanted supporters to feel proud when they wore the jersey and to see people they relate to wearing it too.
That sense of shared pride is powerful, and it spreads much faster when creators are part of the narrative.
The trigger moment was recognising that influencer-generated content could deliver what they were missing: wider awareness, emotional storytelling, and a route to audiences who live on social platforms.
With The Influence Room, the value was immediately clear, they could get far more variety, far more reach, and far more authentic storytelling for the same investment.
What convinced the team was the simple fact that social media is a huge part of fandom now.
Fans want to feel close to the squad, and creators help build that bridge in a way brands simply can’t do alone.
The Influence Room offered the right mix of volume, relevance, and connection.
Strategic Content
The squad announcement for the British & Irish Lions is a cultural event as much as a sporting one.
Canterbury wanted to make it louder, wider, and more emotionally charged by tapping into social media, where the rugby conversation is happening every day, especially with younger supporters.
Their goal was simple but powerful:
Build brand awareness around the announcement and give the new jersey the attention it deserved.
The brand realised pretty quickly that social media isn’t just a place to push out updates anymore.
It’s where fans actually find things, talk about them, argue about them, and show support for the teams they’re obsessed with.
And with the Lions bringing together four nations under one badge, there was a real chance to build something that felt genuinely shared and that came from the fans as much as it was made for them.
Influencer marketing offered reach, personality, and authenticity.
It let everyday fans and rugby advocates tell the story from their own point of view, instead of relying solely on big campaigns or polished studio content.
For Canterbury, this wasn’t about chasing trends. It was about giving supporters more ways to feel involved.
The Experience

Once Canterbury launched the campaign through The Influence Room, things moved quickly and naturally.
The platform made it straightforward to get the campaign moving.
Briefs, creator selection, approvals, it all slotted smoothly into their marketing process. No heavy admin. No long delays. Just a clean setup that saved the team time and opened up a new way of working.
The creators weren’t random influencers, they were rugby fans, lifestyle creators, fitness advocates, and people who understood what the Lions represent.
Their passion translated directly into the content. Supporters could see it wasn’t just a paid post. It was genuine excitement and social proof.
The mix of creators meant the campaign reached audiences across different corners of social media, such as TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, reels, reaction videos, quick unboxings, styling content, and even family-focused posts.
An unexpected win was seeing how many fans engaged not just with the creators, but with Canterbury itself.
People were talking about the shirt, tagging friends, sharing anticipation for the squad, and showing their own connection to the team.
The response inside the business was overwhelmingly positive. The team could feel how the campaign changed the energy around the launch.
Supporters felt included. Younger fans felt spoken to. And Canterbury gained a new layer of relevance online.
The Influence Room team behind the platform helped streamline the process making it far easier for Canterbury to focus on storytelling rather than logistics.
With everything coming together it felt like the right partnership at the right time.
The Results
The "British & Irish Lions Rugby Shirt" campaign exceeded expectations across the board with:
- 87 bids
- 45 creators
- 81 delivered assets
- 2.1M reach
- 2.4M impressions
- 25K engagements
- 0.62% engagement rate
- £56.8K EMV
For a campaign tied to a single moment like the squad announcement, the scale and depth of the content made a real impact.
The assets weren’t just high-performing, they felt personal. Real fans wearing the shirt. Real reactions. Real excitement.
Internal confidence surged as well. Stakeholders could clearly see how influencer marketing contributed to the growing excitement and recognition around the launch.
Standout Creator Moment
One creator who made a huge mark on the campaign was Oliver Phelps.
His posts generated an incredible response:
- 2 assets
- 677K views
- 1.4M reach
- 1.6M impressions
- 13K engagements
His content found the perfect balance between his personality and rugby pride.
Fans loved seeing a recognisable figure sharing the moment of the squad announcement and kit launch in such an authentic, relatable way.
“I really enjoyed working with Canterbury on this campaign, they were very easy to work with and provided the rugby shirt very promptly.” - Oliver
Conclusion
Canterbury’s work with the British & Irish Lions is a good example of what happens when a long-standing rugby brand opens itself up to how fans actually talk online and share moments today.
They brought creators into the mix, the people who already live and breathe the sport. That didn’t just get more eyes on the launch; it made supporters feel closer to the players and created a real buzz around the new jersey.
The results speak for themselves: over 1.8M people reached and 2.4M impressions. More importantly, it delivered the kind of scale, energy, and honesty the launch needed.
For Canterbury, it signalled a shift, moving towards a style of communication that feels more connected to the fans and the wider rugby community.
Does your brand want to build deeper visibility and reach new audiences through creators?
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