A Wienermobile Road Rally, Mapped Out by Fans on Social Media
A SUMMER promotional mainstay, the mobile marketing tour of the Oscar Mayer Wienermobiles, is being rebooted as a cross-country road rally in a change that is emblematic of how Madison Avenue is remaking event marketing under the influence of social media.
The revamped tour, called the Wienermobile Run, is to be announced on Monday by Oscar Mayer, part of the Kraft Foods Group. To encourage consumers to follow the promotion on social media like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, the young men and women who drive the six Wienermobiles â" Hotdoggers, in Oscar Mayer parlance â" are being organized into teams.
Each teamâs vehicle gets its own name â" among them, Autobuhn, DriftDog and SpeedyWiener â" and hashtag. The teams will race around the country accumulating points as the drivers perform tasks or challenges submitted by the public on a Web site, wienermobilerun.com.
âPeople have interacted with our Wienermobiles for decades,â said Tom Bick, senior director for integrated marketing at Oscar Mayer in Madison, Wis., by, for instance, waving as they drove past or âvisiting them in the parking lots of supermarkets.â
âNow, we have the tools for people to really, really interact with them,â he added, as the Wienermobiles become âpowerful social media engagement vehicles.â
âWhat weâre trying to do is create stronger bonds between the Wienermobiles and consumers,â Mr. Bick said, by cultivating âcommunities of supportâ in the form of the six teams.
The promotion is an effort to mash up âthe classic cross-country road rally with gamification,â he added â" that is, the infusion of marketing campaigns with aspects of online games or video games.
Oscar Mayer is working on the Wienermobile Run with Olson PR, the public relations division of Olson, which became the public relations agency of record for the brand in September.
âIf someone handed you the keys to six giant hot dogs on wheels, what would you do?â asked Jody Moore, vice president at the Chicago office of Olson PR. The answer, she said, was to develop a campaign that would âput the Wienermobiles in the hands of their fans.â
âThe folks at Oscar Mayer are flooded with requests to have the Wienermobiles show up at parties and events,â Ms. Moore said. âThis is giving people what they wanted for a really long time.â
The Wienermobile Run is not the only example of how social media are transforming event marketing, also referred to as experiential marketing, as advertisers venture onto American highways for summer road trips. The trend, which was under way last year, seems to be accelerating.
âFor our Silverado truck launch we feel itâs got to be a visceral experience, not just a visual experience,â said Maria Rohrer, director of marketing for Chevrolet trucks at the Chevrolet division of General Motors in Detroit.
âSo absolutely weâre building social media into a boots-on-the-ground strategyâ to introduce the 2014 Silverado pickups, she added, which includes bringing trucks to 34 locations around Texas, where the rollout began last week, to be followed by visits to 37 locations throughout the rest of the country, including âa grand opening of a Cabelaâsâ sporting goods store and the Brickyard 400 Nascar race.
Another Kraft Foods Group brand, A.1. steak sauce, is developing an experiential component for a campaign, carrying the theme âA.1. for life,â that began in late June and includes the brandâs page on Facebook. The idea is to offer consumers âan A.1. upgraded experience at a concert or a sporting event,â said Brett Castle, brand manager for A.1. at Kraft in Glenview, Ill., which would âbring to lifeâ how using A.1. improves the taste of steak or other foods.
âThereâs an opportunity to celebrate and reward passionate fans,â he added, âand bring new people into the franchise.â
The A.1. campaign is being created by Crispin Porter & Bogusky, part of MDC Partners. âItâs letting A.1. lovers know we love them back,â said Bob Winter, executive creative director at the Crispin Porter office in Miami, by ânot just talking about the spirit of âA.1. for life,â but by demonstrating it in the real world, creating experiences to help people see what itâs like to live A.1.â
Mr. Winter said he envisioned a section at a concert hall, stadium or arena that âwould be branded with the A.1. logo, and the people who get to sit in those seats would get great seats and get served a big, juicy, delicious steak while watching their event.â
Discussions also are under way about creating âthe worldâs first sauce-related credit card,â Mr. Winter said, laughing, which would offer consumers found through platforms like social media a telephone number to call to âreceive A.1. steak sauce anywhere in the world.â
âWeâre considering sending the card to a handful of celebrities whoâve proved themselves to be A.1. lovers,â he added, âand a regular person, not a celebrity, whoâs also proved himself or herself an âA.1. for lifeâ fan.â
âTheyâll talk about, and get buzz for, the brand,â Mr. Winter said. âBy giving these people a voice, you turn them into the media for the campaign.â
The campaign also has elements in traditional media like ads in publications that include ESPN the Magazine, People, Rolling Stone, Sports Illustrated, US Weekly and USA Today. Those ads carry the headline âLife is too short to live A.2.â
