Cannes Lions

Cheetos Museum

GOODBY SILVERSTEIN & PARTNERS, San Francisco / CHEETOS / 2017

Presentation Image
Case Film

Overview

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Credits

Overview

Description

No two Cheetos® snacks are alike. They’re made in a way that results

in each one being completely unique. And every so often, they look

like something familiar. Like a seahorse. Or a cat. Or Abe Lincoln.

So we turned our cheesy snack into a piece of art.

We created the Cheetos Museum, featuring real Cheetos found by

real people that look like real things. It was the world’s first collection

of the most interesting Cheetos shapes in existence. Then we

challenged Americans to curate the exhibit by submitting the most

amazing Cheetos shapes they could find, sparking a nationwide hunt

for the uncanny works of art in every bag.

Execution

We launched with a series of online films featuring actual Cheetos®

shapes that had been found that looked like Abe Lincoln, the Statue

of Liberty, the Loch Ness Monster and more.

These films drove consumers to visit CheetosMuseum.com, where

they could explore the exhibit, vote on their favorites and submit their

own shapes to win up to $60,000.

To submit, you simply uploaded a photo of your Cheetos shape to be

framed and exhibited in the online gallery. The most unique

submissions were featured in social posts, constantly generating new

content throughout the campaign. We then collected some of the

most popular Cheetos from fans to preserve them for the exhibit.

Then we took the museum on tour, culminating in a live exhibit in

New York City’s Grand Central Station, where the best Cheetos

pieces submitted were displayed for viewing.

Outcome

The Cheetos Museum was the most engaging social media campaign

in the brand’s history.

The 14-week campaign nearly doubled business goals and resulted

in the strongest sales week in Cheetos history, and the brand’s share

of the cheese-puff market grew by 1.5 points.

The campaign generated over 23 million video views and was a

trending topic on Facebook for two consecutive days. It was featured

on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the

TODAY show, Good Morning America and in USA TODAY, garnering

over 1 billion earned-media impressions.

The site received 1.47 millions visits, 525% higher than the Cheetos

average. And 127,717 unique Cheetos were submitted—over five

times the anticipated goal.

And in an unprecedented turn of events, a Cheetos snack shaped like

Harambe the gorilla sold for $99,000 on eBay, making our cheesy

snack worth as much as an actual piece of art by Banksy.

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