Titanium > Titanium
DCX GROWTH ACCELERATOR, New York / PAYLESS / 2019
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for Titanium?
This campaign became a global earned media sensation. The went viral and led to an onslaught of national and international media coverage totaling over 8.8 Billion total international earned media impressions (excluding TV buy which began Dec 5th). The campaign's Adweek story became the most read article in the publication for all of 2018.
Background
Situation
As a budget shoe retailer from Middle America, Payless had stigmatized by fashion influencers as a low-quality and fashion-backward place to shop. Its going in and out of bankruptcy in 2017 added to this stigma. However, Payless had added a variety of fashion-forward shoes to its portfolio, and wanted to announce that the store was a great place to shop for high quality yet affordable high fashions.
The Brief
From Thanksgiving through the Holiday Season, consumers are bombarded with tremendous amounts of advertising clutter. Payless’ holiday advertising has in the past gotten lost. This year, we want to advertise Payless’ Holiday and Winter shoes in a way that breaks through in this extremely cluttered media environment.
Objectives
Increase awareness of Payless during the holiday season
Communicate value-for-money proposition of Payless’ new shoe portfolio
Create social media buzz
Describe the creative idea
We opened a fake luxury store in LA, called it Palessi, and filled it with Payless shoes marked up by 1800%. We then invited fashionista influencers to an exclusive launch party. We conducted interviews throughout the day asking party guests to express their thoughts on the brand, planning to use their responses as footage in what ultimately became the commercial. The campaign entertains in part because of how thoroughly the Palessi branding persuades the fashionistas that the shoes are luxury items worth their enormous price tags (so much so they actually bought shoes ranging from $200-$640) and in part because of just how shocked they are to learn they’ve been duped.
Describe the strategy
Data Gathering: Populist Fashionistas
Data revealed that our target shared a populist streak as well as an extreme interest in fashion. We explored this unexpected pairing in research and uncovered a tension. On one hand, these consumers had developed a taste for the fashion-forward items that Influencers were posting. On the other hand, most could not afford these items, and rejected influencer culture as either too superficial or too materialistic.
Target Audiences:
Consumer target: mainstream, budget-conscious shoppers.
Influencer target: Fashion influencers.
Approach: Pranking Influencers, Across Platforms
We decided to pursue a unique influencer marketing approach of pranking influencers. We convinced influencers to pay 1800% mark-ups for Payless shoes, effectively endorsing these fashions for everyday Americans who could only the $10-$40 price range. Counter-intuitively, we also used this approach to gain the respect of fashion influencers, knowing that most professionals love and share humorous critiques of their industries.
Describe the execution
Pop-Up Influencer Activation
October 27 & 28 - We hosted an opening party for Palessi. Typical of influencer events, we created an immersive high-touch experience, and used video to capture testimonials about the quality of the products and the “attitude” of the brand. The difference was that the event was “fake,” and the shoes were from Payless. We created videos of influencers endorsing the shoes.
Placement in Influencer Media
November 21 - We seeded the story of the pop-up event to the very group that we were making fun of: Fashion Influencers. Influencers rapidly spread word of the Palessi prank across Twitter, FB, and Instagram, turning Palessi into a viral phenomenon.
Mass-Media & Scale
November 28 - To give the pop-up widespread exposure, we seeded its story to mass-market news outlets, TV shows, fashion publications, and celebrity commentators. National television coverage began in late November and continued through mid-February.
List the results
8.8 billion total global earned media impressions (excluding TV/digital buy which began Dec 5th)
- Featured in 1,641+ broadcast shows across the U.S. alone
- Feature segments in Good Morning America, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, The -
Steve Harvey Show, Ellen DeGeneres, The Real and MSNBC
- Forbes: “Brilliant Palessi Stunt”
- USA Today: “Genius marketing”
- The Washington Post: “The Prank of the Century”
- Maxim: “Don Draper-Level Brilliant Marketing”
1.5 billion+ impressions across Facebook & Twitter, spreading broadly through fashion, finance, hip hop and even sports.
- Questlove: “Champion Trolling”
- Barstool Sports: “Take a freaking bow, Payless. It actually makes me want to go shopping
at Payless because of how they dunked so hard on “influencers”
23% increase in Unaided Awareness
42% increase in Brand Consideration
46% increase in “Brand is Better Value”
More Entries from Titanium in Titanium
24 items
More Entries from DCX GROWTH ACCELERATOR
24 items