The other day I was telling my wife about the
Oreo Superbowl tweet. You remember my wife. She doesn't work in advertising, and though she is incredibly supportive she often doesn't understand what the fuss is about.
But back to the Oreo tweet. You know the one. It happened last year with the blackout
half way through the Superbowl game and Oreo, quick as a flash, tweeted “You can still
dunk in the dark”.
I asked her what she thought. She said she
thought it was sweet but sounded like something unnecessary I’d said when we had the
blackout because of the storm, though I hadn’t been talking about dunking
cookies.
I asked if she’d seen it before.
“Don’t be silly. I’m not on Twitter. You know
that. Is anyone apart from that Matt Galloway?” (She likes Metro Morning).
“Well actually 19.7% of Canadians are on
Twitter.”
"And how many follow Oreo?" (She knows more than she lets on).
"About 5000 at the time."
“Doesn’t sound that much to me.”
“Well the big thing is the number of people
who shared it with their friends.”
“Well how many?”
“Over 15,000.”
“So how many people saw this ad?”
“And how many people saw the Superbowl?”
“About 108
million in the US plus another 7 in Canada .”
“So nearly 40 times more people saw that
nice Budweiser ad with the horses than your silly tweet. Am I supposed to be
impressed?”
I decided more wine was needed.
2 comments:
Sounds like your wife would like the Ad Contrarian... :)
http://adcontrarian.blogspot.jp
Thanks Peter. I'm not sure she's that interested but I liked it. She certainly thinks there isn't much stuff that makes her laugh or cry.
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