Coca-Cola is running a campaign fronted by an AI-generated version of José Mourinho instead of contracting with the incoming Real Madrid manager himself, according to Digiday. The move tests whether synthetic celebrity likenesses can deliver brand lift without the recurring payment structures that define traditional athlete endorsements.
The company created a digital clone of Mourinho to host a campaign series, licensing his image and voice through a negotiated agreement but avoiding the exclusive retainer and appearance fees that typically accompany direct celebrity partnerships. According to Digiday, the AI version allows Coca-Cola to control scheduling, messaging, and distribution without coordinating with Mourinho's management team or working around his Real Madrid obligations.
The mechanism works because the economics shift from recurring talent fees to a one-time licensing payment plus production costs. Traditional celebrity deals often include six- or seven-figure annual retainers, appearance fees per activation, creative approval delays, and exclusivity clauses that limit where and how the brand can deploy the talent. An AI clone model collapses those costs into a single negotiation, then allows the brand to generate unlimited content variations without additional approvals or scheduling friction. The brand retains Mourinho's recognition value while eliminating the coordination overhead that comes with a real person under contract.
This matters for physical product brands because celebrity partnerships often consume disproportionate budget relative to their direct sales impact, particularly when distribution is constrained or the product lacks retail velocity on its own. A small brand shipping energy drinks or athletic accessories cannot afford a Mourinho deal, but the pattern Coca-Cola is testing opens a different route: license a micro-celebrity or local influencer's likeness for a narrow geography or product line, generate the content using AI tools, and run the campaign at a fraction of traditional endorsement cost.
The steal for a physical product brand is to identify a regional or niche figure with strong audience overlap but limited national reach, then negotiate a synthetic likeness license for a defined use case. A supplement brand targeting amateur runners, for example, approaches a regional marathon champion with 5,000 Instagram followers and offers a flat $2,500 fee to license their image and voice for AI-generated video content promoting a recovery drink. The brand uses tools like Synthesia or HeyGen to produce 10 video variations in different languages or formats, then runs them as paid social creative across Facebook and TikTok for six months. Total cost including production: under $5,000. The athlete avoids ongoing commitments, the brand controls the content calendar, and the campaign scales without renegotiation.
The approach also works for product launches where timing matters more than celebrity tier. A cookware brand introducing a new pan design needs launch content fast but cannot wait three months for a chef's availability. The brand licenses an AI clone of a food blogger with 50,000 YouTube subscribers for $3,000, generates 15 recipe videos featuring the pan, and publishes them within two weeks. The blogger receives a one-time payment and retains rights for their own use; the brand gets launch velocity without the coordination drag of a live shoot.
Coca-Cola's timing aligns with the company's preparation for a global agency review covering media, data, and technology, as reported by Digiday. The synthetic talent test likely informs how the company allocates budget between traditional celebrity contracts and AI-generated content in future planning cycles. For smaller brands, the pattern is already actionable: the tools exist, the licensing frameworks are emerging, and the cost structure favors brands that need speed and control over marquee names.
The takeaway
License a niche figure's AI likeness for one-time fee, generate unlimited content variations, eliminate ongoing talent coordination costs.
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