Entertainment > Branded Content
ORCHARD, New York / OCEAN SPRAY / 2023
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for Entertainment?
The work is relevant because it uses an entertainment-first method of selling a CPG product, and does so in an artful and culturally-relevant way.
Rather than using traditional CPG tropes to sell Ocean Spray’s 90+ year old product, jellied cranberry sauce, we created a simple and magical story around the arrival of the jelly at a boring and beige holiday dinner. The jelly takes on supernatural properties and commands the family to join in its dance.
Casting, wardrobe and an original dance track all make this a totally unique and highly-effective story of transformation during the holiday season.
Background
As part of our foundational brand work with Ocean Spray, we had repositioned them from a juice company to a cranberry company, showing cranberries as an essential source of disruptive power and flavor. Our job with this work was to refresh the power story for the holidays.
Thanksgiving is a big moment for the brand culturally, and the most crucial time of year for the company’s sales.
And the brand was losing ground with millennials, right as millennials were taking over holiday hosting duties in their extended families. We needed to make the brand relevant with this audience and lift sales during this critical time of year.
To recruit new consumers, we made an entertaining film and a custom dance track that would make the brand famous with a new generation.
Describe the strategy & insight
Knowing we had to capture the attention of millennials, we probed two areas: their relationship with advertising and their relationship with Thanksgiving. Both areas presented a challenge.
We knew millennials were immune to traditional CPG advertising. The CPG playbook—i.e. making food look delicious—was not going to work. Especially since our product was not delicious-looking–it’s gelatinous, strange, and unnaturally-shaped.
And after several years of canceled holiday gatherings, disrupted traditions, and significant collective grief, an ad that showed saccharine holiday magic would feel dishonest and out-of-touch.
Our key strategic choice was to take the collective anxiety around this first post-COVID Thanksgiving and create a moment of joyful catharsis.
Our audience was ready for a wild, even messy, party. So using our strange, jiggling cranberry jelly, we delivered exactly that.
Describe the creative idea
The creative idea was simple: cranberry jelly is weird.
It wobbles. It quivers. It’s an unnatural shape and a bright red color.
Its strangeness makes it an interesting party guest – a standout on a table of beige, bland Thanksgiving foods.
And it's often the last thing to hit the table, like a jiggling punctuation mark to the holiday spread. When the jelly lands, the party has begun.
We pushed this product’s strange qualities to the extreme, with a film where the power of the jelly’s wobble compels an entire family to wobble along with it. Turning their boring holiday dinner into something wild and absurd.
The takeaway: when you bring the cranberry jelly, you bring the fun.
To make this moment impactful and culturally contagious, we gave the jelly its own original dance track and turned the wobble into a dance that anyone could do, via a TikTok challenge.
Describe the craft & execution
Creative decisions were inspired by the strange product intrinsics: it’s red, tart, and jiggly. We used these alien qualities as our guide.
We constructed a relentlessly boring, beige Thanksgiving to be disrupted by the bright red jelly. We paid careful attention to set design and wardrobe, especially color.
We cast a mix of dancers and actors who could be subdued and bored, and then transform–moving their bodies wildly to mimic the jelly’s movements.
We composed an original dance track with Mack Goudy, Jr. that could compel wild movement.
Our shoot was one 12-hour day in Toronto. We executed within 60 business days, from first presentation to ship date (July - October).
With careful budgeting, we cut a :60, :30, :15, and :06s for TV, OLV and social.
We scaled the campaign with a TikTok dance challenge, wild postings, high-profile TV placements and a cranberry yule log video: the longest-ever pre-roll.
Describe the results
The campaign received over 4.5 billion PR impressions, making cranberry jelly the most talked-about product in pop culture for the holidays.
From TikTok to Twitter, Ocean Spray saw over 236k engagements. Brand mentions were up 77% YoY, with positive mentions up +399%, and all mentions staying 94% positive/neutral. The spot also had one of the highest completion rates on YouTube (+40% above benchmark).
Sales for cranberry jelly increased 27% YoY. Sales increased cross-portfolio too: Juice was up +6% vs YA and Dried Fruit +11%.
Ocean Spray experienced unprecedented lifts across nearly all aspects of the brand, and the industry and public reacted intensely to the work. From ranking on top ad lists to reactions from the public, there was a consistent theme. As one critic said, “If this is the future of advertising in a world of too many things fighting for your attention, I’m all for it.”
Is there any cultural context that would help the jury understand how this work was perceived by people in the country where it ran?
Cranberry jelly has been an American Thanksgiving staple for over 90 years. It’s a jellied fruit product that comes in a can. When you remove it from the can, the cranberry jelly retains the ridged shape of its container. It’s both a beloved tradition and a commonly-mocked food at the American Thanksgiving table.
It’s strange and unnatural-looking. It’s also delightfully bright red, sweet and tart. It goes great as a side to the traditional meal of roasted turkey and mashed potatoes.
Millennial consumers, who we needed to recruit, have been raised on more natural foods than previous generations and are suspicious of anything in a can. That makes canned cranberry jelly a difficult sell for them.
This generation is also in the process of creating their own meaningful holiday traditions, so selling the jelly as something traditionally important would not be effective with this audience.
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