Title | THE MENULOG 420 HIJACK |
Brand | MENULOG |
Product / Service | MENULOG |
Category | G04. Social Behaviour |
Entrant | CONNECTING PLOTS Beaconsfield, AUSTRALIA |
Idea Creation | CONNECTING PLOTS Beaconsfield, AUSTRALIA |
Media Placement | UM Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
PR | FINCHCO AGENCY Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Production | CONNECTING PLOTS Beaconsfield, AUSTRALIA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
David Jansen | Connecting Plots | Creative Partner |
Chris Johnson | Connecting Plots | Creative Director |
Lewis Steele | Connecting Plots | Head of Social & Content |
Gemma Barr | Connecting Plots | Integrated Project Director |
Julia Kenny | Connecting Plots | Copywriter |
Alexa Burchell | Connecting Plots | Art Director |
Joe Davies-Griffith | Connecting Plots | Senior Designer |
The Menulog 420 Hijack campaign is a great example of a well implemented media campaign that targeted our millennial audience at specific times and location points. From our app to social media, to guerilla style media on the street we continually hinted at our association with 420 day and the Menulog service as a cure all for the munchies. As a guerilla style campaign that we wanted our millennial audience to discover, the media tactics were crucial, providing just enough touch points to not give the game away.
Menulog’s MO is to target youth. And Snoop Dog had really delivered for us. But Snoop’s contract had expired leaving a large gap in our advertising. So we needed to find something from his world to keep people engaged, without the mega-star price tag. We looked at one of his favourite days of the year. The 4th of April or 4/20 – An international marijuana celebration day. We quickly noticed something interesting in the data, especially around 4:20pm. This sparked our idea.
With a limited budget we needed a guerilla style idea that would get people talking and ordering. An idea that connected us to Snoops' world. So we decided to take over one of his favourite days. 4/20 - An international marijuana celebration. To stay in the vibe of the day we launched a guerilla style campaign of hints revolving around the Menulog’s munchie crushing delivery service and 420 itself. We began in social, on our app and then took it to street level. Those who figured out what we were up to were rewarded on the day itself with $420 munchie vouchers.
Menulog’s bullseye target audience are city dwelling millennials. So we decided to target them exactly where they were. On their phones and on the street in urban locations primarily in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. So we kept the idea underground to match the feel of the day, creating a hijack campaign that our consumers had to discover themselves, ultimately giving it more power amongst our millennial audience.
Phase 1: In the week leading up to 420 Day we started dropping some crumbs to see who knew what we were up to. First, we baked a $4.20 discount into our app, which only appeared at 4:20pm. Phase 2: We posted, tweeted and snapped some juicy munchie hints at exactly 4:20pm each day. We then painted a mural, put up some mouth-watering posters - on the 420 bus route and gave free delivery to anyone who lived on ‘High’ Street.’ Phase 3: People then started searching Menulog + 420, so we served them a 420 error instead of the standard 404. And our final crumb…declaring our love of Four’N Twenty pies. Then on 420 Day itself we gave the guys who discovered our campaign $420 Menulog Munchie Vouchers.
At 4:20pm on the 20th of April, orders jumped by 22% as the consumers nationally prepared for their impending munchies. And it wasn’t just consumers who were excited. Media jumped on our 420 promotion, with coverage across key millennial outlets, creating over 12.9 million earned media impressions. That’s over $320k worth of earned media value. Our consumers engaged with us over 1.9M times through our owned channels, in app and on web.
April 20 has become an international counterculture holiday, where people gather to celebrate and consume cannabis. Menulog knew their service played into this, providing munchies right to your door. With Snoop as our spokesperson the match seemed perfect. So we kept the idea underground to match the feel of the day, creating a hijack campaign that our consumers had to discover themselves, ultimately giving it more power amongst our millennial audience.