Title | WHEN CONSUMERS BECOME INVENTORY TRACKERS |
Brand | PARLE AGRO |
Product / Service | HIPPO BAKED MUNCHIES |
Category | A04. Direct Response Digital Media |
Entrant | CREATIVELAND ASIA Mumbai , INDIA |
Entrant Company: | CREATIVELAND ASIA Mumbai, INDIA |
DM/Advertising Agency: | CREATIVELAND ASIA Mumbai, INDIA |
Credits |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Sajan Raj Kurup | Creativeland Asia | Chairman and Chief Creative Officer |
Vikram Gaikwad | Creativeland Asia | Executive Creative Director |
Anu Joseph | Creativeland Asia | Creative Director |
Huzefa Kapadia | Creativeland Asia | Sr. Writer |
Vinit Bharucha | Creativeland Asia | Writer |
Jay Gala | Creativeland Asia | Account Supervisor |
Anjali Khanchandani | Creativeland Asia | Account Executive |
Bryan Elijah | Creativeland Asia | Art Director |
Hippo Baked Munchies, a new entrant in the $1.5bn Indian snack market, was launched in 400,000 stores across India. Unexpected sales put pressure on Hippo's new yet efficient Sales & Distribution network. Stocks were drying up in stores by the hour and they found it challenging to track and re-stock the empty stores as quickly. Especially as 92% of the Indian snack market is still unorganized retail. The challenge was to track empty stores quickly and plug the lag in supply, and help Hippo cope with this super demand.
The strength of the creative lies in its ability to blur the lines between consumer, the sales & distribution and marketing. And get them to seamlessly work for the brand. Its originality is in being able to exploit social media in a way it has never been done before. Hippo used Twitter effectively. He interacted with his customers using his inimitable style. Also, when Hippo actually refilled stocks when the customers needed to snack, Hippo lived up to his motto of Don't go Hungry. Hunger is the root of all evil. And became even more endearing to his customers.
Hippo used Twitter to do something that it has never been expected to do before: To act as an inventory tracking interface. To get consumers to track stock by the hour and report to the Sales & Distribution teams. To do this, Hippo got his followers on Twitter to send him a tweet whenever they were unable to find Hippo packs at a store. A core cell was set up to collect and disburse this information to the respective sales teams who restocked the store within hours. Hippo also reciprocated with incentives and real-time stock replenishment updates on Twitter.
Tweets poured in from 45 cities across India. At zero cost, Hippo had 400 additional people helping with Sales & Distribution over Twitter - equivalent to almost 50% of the strength of its Sales & Distribution network itself. Sales rose by 76% in the first few months of its launch. The campaign even helped Hippo identify, gauge demand, and prioritise its high potential new markets.