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Marketing Campaigns Some That Killed It and Some That Should’ve Been Killed What We Can Learn

Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

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Not all marketing campaigns are created equal. Some are dripping with creativity and executed flawlessly generating a great response. Others are well intended but get derailed by poor execution or a lack of attention to detail. And then there are some that never should have been launched due to poor concept, planning and/or execution.This presentation - originally given by Steve Phipps (from LunaWeb.com) at the 2011 Memphis BarCamp - reviews a number of marketing initiatives ranging from wildly successful to incredibly disastrous. The design of the presentation is to learn from all of these marketing efforts and then apply them to our own marketing efforts. After all, experience is a great teacher, especially when it’s someone else’s experience!

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Page 1: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Marketing Campaigns

Some That Killed It and Some That Should’ve

Been Killed

What We Can Learn

Page 2: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

What's the point of this presentation?

• Learn from some really good marketing efforts and some really bad ones from a strategic perspective

• Includes online, offline & mobile efforts

• Voice your opinion

• Takeaways for your business or clients

• Catch a 30 minute nap

Page 3: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Who am I?

14+ years of marketing experience...

• marketing director 

• business/marketing consultant

• owned a Chick-fil-A 

• sang on David Letterman

• husband, father, runner, etc.

• new director of business development at LunaWeb

• @runningstp #reallygreatguy

Page 4: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Marketing That Killed It

Page 5: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Blendtec

• “Will it Blend?” videos featuring founder Tom Dickson

• Started October, 2006• 130M+ video views• Sales increased 5x• Tons of PR• Ad Age’s top 10 viral

Page 6: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Why It Works

• Destroys things

• Demonstrates product

• Multiple channels (video, app)

• Timely: Piggy backs on popular products/news (i.e., iPhone 4S)

• Raises curiosity

• It’s unexpected

Page 7: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Applebee’s Talking Cat• 89 restaurants

• Started 06/11

• 14 minute guarantee

• 60k+ scans

• 5,900+ FB likes

• 70k+ YouTube channel views

• Lunch sales up 9.8%

Page 8: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Why It Works

• Interactive• Considers a captive audience with time on

their hands• Fun• Unique• Clear message: Builds on the 14 minute

guarantee

Page 9: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Takeaways So Far• If you have a great product - show it, especially

if you can show it doing something unusual

• Keep it simple

• Entertainment is good!

• Success doesn’t always require high investment

• QR codes can be effective when used at the right time

• Always consider your audience and what message you want to communicate

Page 10: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Marketing that should have been DOA…

Page 11: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Sony PSP - 2005

• “Vandalism” - urban kids w/ PSP’s

• Targeted “urban nomads”

• Touted as disruptor device

Page 12: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Urban Nomads Respond

No street cred for Sony!

Page 13: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Sony PSP – Christmas, 2006

• Charlie blogs to get his friend Jeremy a PSP for Christmas

• Charlie’s cousin Pete raps about wanting a PSP

www.alliwantforxmasisapsp.com

Page 14: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

A phony is sniffed out…

…www.somethingawful.com

Page 15: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Sony, er, Charlie Responds

Yo where all u hatas com from... juz cuz you aint feelin the flow of PSP dun mean its sum mad faek website or summ... you all be trippin.

-Charlie

Page 16: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Surprise, it was us…

Busted. Nailed. Snagged. As many of you have figured out (maybe our speech was a little too funky fresh???), Peter isn't a real hip-hop maven and this site was actually

developed by Sony. Guess we were trying to be just a little too clever. From this point forward, we will just stick to making cool products, and use this site to give you

nothing but the facts on the PSP. -Sony Computer Entertainment America

Page 17: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Why It Failed

• They faked it • And then they tried to cover it up• Condescension is a bad marketing

tactic – they underestimated their audience’s intelligence

• They used a really bad rapper

Page 18: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Rutgers Mobile Marketing Mini MBA

According to the website, it’s a program designed to help: “participants design, manage, and track mobile-marketing programs and

campaigns. It provides the business case for

integrating and leveraging mobile into marketing plans,

as well as practical and tactical uses of mobile

tools.”

Page 19: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

When you scan the code with your mobile device you get…

…a standard, non-mobile website

Page 20: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Why It Fails

• QR code takes you to traditional website not optimized for mobile.

• These guys should know better given the content of what they’re teaching.

Page 21: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

More Takeaways

• Be authentic. Faking it only ticks people off.• Don’t insult your customers – they’re smart.• If you mess up, own up to it – don’t cover it up.• When using mobile, truly go mobile. Standard

websites tied to QR codes are a bad idea.• Have relevant content for mobile – interactive is

good.• Tie it to a good promotion or message.

Page 22: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

More Marketing Fails

• GM ad for college discount program

• Ads pulled after complaints

“Stop pedaling… start driving”

Page 23: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Giant Bicycles responds quickly…

• Opportunistic• Timely and

effective• Understands

target market

“stop driving…start pedaling”

Page 24: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Get a 2nd opinion!!

Page 25: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)
Page 26: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)
Page 27: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)
Page 28: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)
Page 29: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

These are your call…

Page 30: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Dr. Pepper Ten

• A not-diet soda targeted to men

• Offensive?• On-target?

Page 31: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Quiznos’ Spongemonkeys

• Men 18-34• Loved or

hated• 4x website

traffic• Created by

Joel Veitch

“They got a pepper bar!!!”

Page 32: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Recap

• Consider your audience• Entertainment is good• Be consistent & clear• Take advantage of recent trends/headlines• Be authentic• Customers are smart• Get a 2nd opinion• Optimize for whatever channel or platform you’re

using

Page 33: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Other Noteworthy Campaigns

• Good– True Blood launch– Ford Fiesta Movement– Geico guinea pigs

• Bad– PETA – Got Beer?– Milk PMS campaign– GM: Create your own Tahoe ad

• Others??

Page 34: Marketing Campaigns That Killed It (and some that didn't)

Questions, comments,

or other wit to share?