Brand Experience and Activation > Excellence in Brand Experience
GOODBY SILVERSTEIN AND PARTNERS, San Francisco / FRITO-LAY + FRITO-LAY CANADA / 2024
Awards:
Overview
Credits
Why is this work relevant for Brand Experience & Activation?
Cheetos put a mischievous spin on traditional celebrity sponsorships in a way that only they could, with a fully integrated 360 brand campaign across the US and Canadian markets.
We called it “Sponsortips”—the first-ever fingertips-sponsorship—which consumers experienced across every touch point: TV, billboards, social, on the cover of their favorite gossip magazine, paparazzi photos “leaked” online. Even at real-life events, like going to see an NBA basketball game, fans were treated to our sponsorship. Anywhere you would normally see a celebrity’s face, we showcased their fingertips (covered in orange dust, of course).
Please provide any cultural context that would help the Jury understand any cultural, national or regional nuances applicable to this work.
Cheetos snacks notoriously leave orange dust (a.k.a. Cheetle) on your fingers. So instead of treating it like a product flaw, we’ve started celebrating it over the last couple of years, turning Cheetle into a badge of honor.
In our latest campaign, we took it one step further by showcasing celebrities’ Cheetle-covered fingertips across all our assets, giving a brand-new take on celebrity sponsorships that only Cheetos could do.
Lastly, in North America, many celebrities are spotted sitting courtside at NBA basketball games—it’s known as “celebrity row.” At most games, the celebrity will be called out by the in-game announcer and featured on the giant video screen at center court. Knowing this, we decided to turn that moment into a branding opportunity.
Background
Like many other brands, Cheetos wanted to associate itself with up-and-coming stars. The goal was to create a campaign that appealed to younger audiences.
But in a world where brands spend $2.5 billion every year making celebrities the faces of their products, we needed to do something different to stand out in a sea of celebrity faces. Especially since our most notorious brand asset has nothing to do with your face. It’s the orange dust (a.k.a. Cheetle) that gets on our customers’ fingertips.
So we decided to flip the world of celebrity sponsorships on its head (or, rather, on its “hands”).
Describe the creative idea
Celebrities are usually the face of a brand. Well, unless that brand is Cheetos.
Cheetos is notoriously famous for leaving orange dust (a.k.a. Cheetle) on your fingers. So we created a first-of-its-kind sponsorship deal by sponsoring just the fingertips of Hollywood and music celebrities from both the US and Canada. We called it “Sponsortips.”
We launched the campaign by hiring superstar Becky G and Hollywood actor Simu Liu, and showcasing their Cheetle-covered fingertips in TV, print and OOH. But we also wanted to take “Sponsortips” into the real world for fans to see.
Celebrity sponsorships often require celebrities to wear products like sneakers or clothes out in public. So fans saw our celebs “wearing” Cheetos dust on their fingertips in leaked paparazzi photos online, in the pages of their favorite gossip magazines and even sitting courtside at an NBA basketball game.
Describe the strategy
These days, many brands sponsor celebrities to endorse their products. It’s the quickest way to win the hearts and minds of consumers.
Our target audience is what we call Rejuveniles—Gen Zers and millennials who, despite their age, have a young mindset. To grab their attention, a traditional celebrity endorsement wouldn’t be enough. We needed to do something much more modern and mischievous.
And since our most iconic asset is the Cheetos dust that gets on your fingertips, we decided to hire a celebrity to become the fingertips of our brand. In fact, our ads purposely tried to hide their face, putting a mischievous spin on typical sponsorships that our target would notice.
We put a spin on every element of traditional endorsements—TV, OOH, magazine covers, “leaked” paparazzi photos—culminating with Simu Liu appearing at a Toronto Raptors game with his fingertips covered in Cheetle.
Describe the execution
In July 2023, we launched in the US market, sponsoring the fingertips of Latin pop star Becky G. In September. We followed up by sponsoring the fingertips of Hollywood star Simu Liu in the Canadian market.
Each celebrity launched the sponsorship on their social feeds, announcing it to their millions of fans. Then their fingertips started showing up everywhere their faces would usually go: billboards, social platforms, “leaked” paparazzi photos. All supported by a series of online social videos.
We also worked directly with gossip magazine Hello! Canada to create an alternate cover for their November 11th issue, featuring Simu Liu and his orange-fingertips.
And on February 14th, 2024, we hijacked the spot where all celebrities go to be seen, when Simu showed up courtside at an NBA basketball game, waving his orange-fingertips. The stunt made it onto the live TV broadcast and took social media by storm.
List the results
The world’s most unique sponsorship got attention from both the media and our fans, with over 2 billion earned-media impressions. It also received 99% neutral and positive sentiment online.
In Canada, Cheetos Crunchy, our core product, achieved 24% sales growth year over year.
And by focusing on our iconic orange dust, we were able to stand out from the competition, with brand recall a whopping 34% higher than our CPG competitors.
The campaign also made a splash in pop culture and was covered by major media outlets like Forbes, People magazine, E!, Billboard magazine, Access Hollywood and many others.
And after our campaign launch, Kim Kardashian appeared on the cover of GQ magazine licking her own Cheetle-covered fingertips, which we didn’t even have to pay for.
“Sponsortips” was such a success, it has now become a global platform for the brand, with more famous fingertips to come in 2024.
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