Daily Signals 23.03.2026

Daily Signals

Huggies stress tests nappies in high-stakes live stream, what Zara’s archival strategy signals for the future of high street retail and how Proton is helping parents secure safer digital futures.

Huggies puts its product claims to the ultimate stress test

Huggies, Expensive Sh*t Campaign, Global

US – Nappy brand Huggies’ latest campaign, Expensive Sh*t’, sees 18 babies wearing Huggies Little Snugglers on luxury goods worth £373,000 ($500,000, €432,000) during a one-hour live-streamed event.

Created by McCann New York and New Zealand, the campaign tests the brand’s claim of up to ‘100% blowout protection’ in real time, transforming the familiar pain point of leaking nappies into unfiltered proof. The work targets Gen Z parents who are navigating early parenthood amid rising living costs, where every day mishaps carry heightened financial impact.

Leaning on unhinged humour and spectacle, Huggies positions reliability as emotional reassurance and economic value. The campaign aligns with insights from our New Codes of Value macrotrend report, which unpacks the consumer wariness and loss of loyalty that are driving a great value shift.

To hear directly from younger parents about shopping and looking after children, head to our Gen Z Parents Communities report.

Strategic opportunity

How can your brand stage high-stakes, culturally resonant product demonstrations that quantify real-world value and build trust with value-conscious customers?

What Zara’s archival strategy signals for the future of high street retail

Global – Fashion retailer Zara is repositioning itself between mass market and luxury with a two-year partnership with acclaimed fashion designer John Galliano, who will design seasonal collections by reworking the brand’s archive.

Described as a process of ‘re-authoring’, the collaboration will see Galliano deconstruct and reconfigure past designs using new materials to attract those who are seeking elevated design at accessible price points.

This shift comes amid growing competition from ultra-fast fashion players such as Shein and Temu, which are capturing younger, price-sensitive shoppers.

Crucially, the partnership signals a deeper structural shift in fashion’s value hierarchy, echoing analysis from our Premium Fashion’s Comeback report. As heritage, authorship and archive-led design become new markers of desirability, high street brands are bridging the gap between cost and quality.

However, the move also exposes a tension at the heart of Zara’s evolution. As archival thinking and authorship become new markers of value, as explored in our New Codes of Value report, applying this language within a fast-fashion model risks feeling performative unless matched by systemic change.

To credibly operate in this space, Zara will need to align product longevity, production volumes and material quality. Without this, the move risks positioning the archive as aesthetic rather than operational which would reveal the limits of luxury signalling within a high-speed, high-volume system.

Zara and Disney collaboration campaign, Global Zara and Disney collaboration campaign, Global

Strategic opportunity

Build archival credibility beyond aesthetics by auditing product lifecycles, materials and production volumes against brand storytelling

Stat: Parents sound alarm as children’s digital identities form too early

School Style Decoded by Walmart, US School Style Decoded by Walmart, US

US – A new survey from Proton reveals that concern about children’s online privacy has become the norm, as digital identities are formed earlier than ever.

According to the study, 78% of US parents are concerned about their child’s online privacy, with 56% very concerned. Nearly six in 10 fear their child’s identity could be stolen before adulthood.

Children are entering the digital world at speed: 76% now own a tablet or smartphone, while 44% already have an email address and 42% use social media. Platforms such as TikTok, used by 63% of the children who are on social media, are central to this early exposure.

Parents are increasingly aware of the long-term impact of digital footprints, citing risks to personal safety (70%), reputation (59%), education (56%) and future employment (55%). Meanwhile, 65% worry educational platforms collect excessive data.

This anxiety is driving demand for solutions, with 66% of parents saying an encrypted inbox could help protect their child’s identity.

Proton’s newly launched Born Private initiative reflects this shift, enabling parents to reserve a private email address for their child and delay activation until they are ready to take control.

For more on how digital-native parents are raising the next generation with privacy and safeguarding in-mind, head to our Gen Z Parents report. 

Strategic opportunity

Online security companies can position themselves as trusted guardians of children’s digital identities by providing tools and education that protect early digital experiences while building long-term loyalty with families

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