Serena Williams to take Bumble's woman-first message to
Super Bowl
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[January 03, 2019]
By Lisa Richwine
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Tennis champion
Serena Williams will star in a year-long marketing campaign for the
Bumble social networking app that will kick off with a message of
women's empowerment during the Feb. 3 Super Bowl, Williams told Reuters
in an interview.
Bumble began in 2014 as a dating platform for women to start discussions
with potential male partners. The company is aiming to promote newer
functions, Bumble BFF and Bumble Bizz, which help women find friends and
build business networks, alongside dating.
In the campaign called "The Ball is in Her Court," Williams will urge
women to make the first move in all aspects of their lives.
"Society has taught us as women to kind of sit back and not necessarily
be the first one to speak up. We want to take that and flip the story,"
Williams said.
"We are letting people know we are not afraid," she added. "We no longer
want to cower. We want to stand up."
Williams, one of the world's top athletes, will compete for a
record-tying 24th Grand Slam singles title at the Australian Open this
month. Her broad endorsement portfolio made her 2018's highest-paid
female athlete, according to Forbes magazine. She also sits on the board
of tech company SurveyMonkey.
Williams helped create the Bumble campaign, which was developed and
produced entirely by women, and will serve as global adviser to the
company.
"I would not be where I am today had I let the fear of making the first
move hold me back," she said.
The campaign will appear across multiple platforms, Bumble said, and its
debut will coincide with the Super Bowl, the annual U.S. football
championship that draws the year's biggest television audience.
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Tennis - Mubadala World
Tennis Championship, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates - December 27,
2018 Serena Williams of the United States in action during her match
against Venus Williams of the United States REUTERS/Suhaib Salem
Bumble declined to say if the campaign will include a TV commercial during the
game, but Williams said the Super Bowl was "a great opportunity for women's
voices to be heard louder."
"We want to make noise," she added. "This is the best and perfect place to make
the biggest noise that we can."
Whitney Wolfe Herd, who founded Bumble to shift the power dynamics of dating and
serves as chief executive, was initially "ridiculed" for the idea that women
should initiate conversations," she told Reuters.
The app now has more than 47 million users worldwide and competes with services
such as Match Group Inc's Tinder and a new Facebook dating option.
The #MeToo movement against sexual harassment has helped change opinions, Wolfe
Herd said. "People are starting to understand the importance of equality. It's
about men and women having healthier relationships and conversations."
In October, Wolfe Herd said Bumble was considering an initial public offering of
stock. "Everything is on the table," she told Reuters, including an initial
public offering "or staying private or an acquisition in some form."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Richard Chang)
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