← All work · Case study · Jakarta · 2025 · Campaign series

Mamayo — Product Storytelling.

A product brand treated like an editorial magazine — hero visuals, real use cases, and a campaign series that stacks into a visual library the brand pulls from across seasons.

ClientMamayo
Year2025
FormatCampaign series
VenueStudio & lifestyle
ScopeBrand · Studio
Mamayo — product storytelling campaign series

Mamayo’s products deserve more than a flat-lay on a feed. We treated the brand the way we’d treat an editorial magazine — hero visuals with point of view, product context that reads as real, use cases shot the way a customer actually holds the thing — and built a campaign series that stacked up into a recognizable visual library over time. The client returned for the next series, which is the honest version of the outcome.

The brief

More than a flat-lay feed.

Most product brands default to a flat-lay feed — product on a plain background, rotating colorways, clean but interchangeable with half the competition. It’s efficient, and for very early-stage brands it’s the right call. For Mamayo, it had become a ceiling. The products were better than the photography was letting them be, and the feed was giving back less than it should.

The brief was deceptively simple: make the products look like they deserve to look. In practice that meant moving up a tier — editorial-quality imagery, lifestyle context, a point of view that survives the scroll. Without losing production discipline or breaking the content calendar in the process.

We scoped the work as a campaign series rather than a one-off shoot. A series stacks. One-off shoots build a folder of assets; a series builds a library that reads as a continuing brand conversation, where this season’s hero image can sit next to last season’s and feel like the same publication.

The second scope decision was to split the shoot days — pure studio for hero and packaging work, pure lifestyle for context and use. Mixing the two on the same day is a common false economy — the lighting logic is different, and the pace is different. Split days give each mode its own discipline.

What we did

Editorial treatment, campaign discipline.

Art direction

Campaign-level direction — mood, palette, composition rules — that binds the series into one publication.

Studio photography

Hero and packaging studio work — controlled light, product-first, built to live across shelf, feed, and product page.

Lifestyle photography

On-location lifestyle sets — the products held, used, and lived-with the way a real customer would.

Reel & social cut-downs

Motion edits cut from the shoot — Reels, Shorts, and social stills sized per-platform, not stretched to fit.

Feed sequencing system

Caption and sequencing rules so the feed tells a cumulative story, not nine unrelated tiles.

Shoot day production

Talent, stylist, prop, and location coordination — budget spent on what shows up in frame, not on wasted setup.

Craft decisions

Shoot for the whole library.

The key decision was to shoot every setup with the library in mind. A shot isn’t just a campaign image — it’s an asset that has to survive into the library, still look right next to next season’s, and still be usable a year later on a product page or an OOH. That changes framing, negative space, and lighting logic in small but decisive ways.

Split shoot days was the other lever. Studio days were lit and paced for product-first precision; lifestyle days were lit and paced for context and movement. Trying to do both on the same day compromises both — by splitting them we got hero work that holds up and lifestyle work that doesn’t feel like a studio pretending to be outside.

Feed sequencing was the under-appreciated half of the work. A product feed is a reading surface — the order and pairing of tiles is the difference between a feed that builds narrative and a feed that just accumulates output. We locked a sequencing system so every monthly update added to the story instead of interrupting it.

The campaign treatment is deliberately editorial. Type, pacing, crop rules — imported from the magazine world — because product brands that borrow from editorial end up with more gravity than ones that borrow from competitors’ feeds.

Outcome

A library, not an album.

The campaign series delivered a visual library Mamayo continues to pull from across seasons — the same asset bank re-crops into new product launches, OOH executions, and partner placements without needing re-shoots every cycle. That’s the compounding behaviour the scope was designed to deliver.

The client returned for the next campaign series, which in client-service terms is the cleanest outcome signal there is. Product brands that come back are brands that got what they came for; we built the series to make the next one easier to commission, not harder.

Disciplines used on this project
Brand Activation · Digital Creative

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