A different kind of shot. (Photo credit: Rolex)
When Rolex introduced the Perpetual 1908, its first new collection in a decade, the brand asked Roger Federer to be the model for the launch campaign. To “humanize” a launch was a departure for Rolex, which had historically introduced new watches without people. The storytelling instead came from the environment: mountains, the sky, the ocean, a racetrack.
Still, a dress watch like the 1908 offered little in the way of environmental storytelling, leaving Rolex to turn to Federer, who had just retired from tennis. For the release, the brand captioned a photograph of him in a grey sweater, wearing the 1908: “When excellence redefines tradition.”
A year later, in 2024, Rolex asked Federer to model the launch campaign of its steel GMT-Master II with a grey and black bezel. Rolex's narrative, this time, managed to link the former tennis pro to the GMT-Master’s identity: “From Melbourne to New York, Paris to London... travelling the globe has been a constant for the player.”
Most recently, Federer was again asked to front the campaign for Rolex's new collection, the Land-Dweller. He was no longer cast as a traveler, but as “an astute entrepreneur,” someone “reinventing his life to build for the future,” Rolex wrote, echoing the Land-Dweller’s ethos from its press materials.
Rolex predictions are hard to make, but one safe assumption for 2026 is Federer’s presence in the launch campaign. To be sure, women Testimonees have also appeared in Rolex launches, including Yuja Wang for the Land-Dweller. Still, no one has appeared as consistently as Federer, a sign of how central he has become to Rolex’s strategy of featuring people to model new releases.
Roger Federer. (Photo credit: Rolex)