Monday, February 2, 2009

Jack in the Box 'Hang in There Jack' misses the RSS feed

See yesterday's post if you missed the ad that Jack in the Box ran during the Superbowl. This post is 'part II' or 'the morning after.'

By Feb 2 in the morning, it's clear the www.hangintherejack.com site has a lot of great multimedia and much of it in YouTube format. I believe that all of these videos were posted during and immediately after Superbowl but because the site couldn't handle the traffic, I, like many, couldn't see them.



The 'creative' on the site is fantastic. And that's why I believe it deserves better tactical execution in social networks and that some of the missed opportunities here border on egregious (let alone the $3mil required to have bought the original ad space.)

The site encourages you to make a video response, comment on the videos and order anything off their menu (in lieu of flowers). But there's one H-U-G-E element it's missing and that's an RSS feed. A simple little icon that allows me to subscribe to this blog. That's out-and-out crazy and another big sign that the people behind the campaign don't understand social media.

Another sign? The Facebook page has one update since yesterday and the Twitter accounts are still at odds with @hangintherejack providing fresh, timely updates to 35 (?) followers and the @jackbox site doubling its followers again to over 1400 despite publishing only one update.

Seems this is an advertising driven campaign and expensive TV airtime will be used to push people to www.hangintherejack.com. Meantime, inexpensive and more personalized social media marketing and engagement will be foregone or done haphazardly as the advertising executives learn on the job. (Hey, in these rapidly evolving times, we're all learning by doing, but what small fee could have paid to have a social media consultant contribute to this promotion.)

I am curious to learn what agency is behind the promotion because my money is on a traditional ad agency that has talked its client into an 'interactive' campaign without fully understanding what an interactive campaign should look like in 2009.

1 comment:

carondg said...

I was just on the hangintherejack.com site and I find this whole campaign ghoulish and can't imagine why some clever ad folks believe that this is going to get more people to eat at a fast-food joint. As it relates to social media, I agree that they lost their footing and don't get the concept. Obviously, they hadn't really planned any real strategy than the storyline. Thumbs down to Jack in the Box.