McDonald's Digital, Case study Search by We Are Unlimited

The Digital Advert titled Search was done by We Are Unlimited advertising agency for McDonald's in United States. It was released in Oct 2016.

McDonald's: Search

Released
October 2016
Posted
October 2016
Industry
Production Agency
Director
Executive Creative Director
Executive Creative Director
Chief Creative Officer
Executive Creative Director

Awards:

Cannes Lions 2017
CyberWeb Campaign: Retail, e-Commerce, Restaurants & Fast Food ChainsSilver Lion

Credits & Description:

Title: Search
Agency: We Are Unlimited
Brand: Mcdonalds
Country: USA
Entrant Company: We Are Unlimited, Chicago
Advertising Agency: We Are Unlimited, Chicago
Media Agency: Omd Usa, Chicago / Resolution Media, Chicago
Pr Agency: Ddb, Chicago
Production Company: Furlined, Los Angeles
Additional Company: The Mill, Los Angeles / The Studio, Chicago / Cartel, Los Angeles
Chief Creative Officer: Ari Weiss (Ddb North America)
Executive Creative Director: John Hansa (We Are Unlimited)
Executive Creative Director: Nate Able (We Are Unlimited)
Executive Creative Director: Reuben Hower (We Are Unlimited)
Sr. Director, Us Marketing, Brand & Marketing Content: Julie Wegner (Mcdonalds Usa)
Chief Marketing Officer: Deborah Wahl (Mcdonalds Usa)
Manager, Brand & Marketing Content: Jacqueline Bruzek (Mcdonalds Usa)
Director, Marketing And Menu Innovation: Erik Nordby (Coca-Cola)
Narrative Strategist: Noemi García (We Are Unlimited)
Chief Strategy Officer: Graceann Bennett (We Are Unlimited)
Account Supervisor: Sarah Stahurski (We Are Unlimited)
Account Executive: Ashton Mitchell (We Are Unlimited)
Assistant Account Executive: Jessa Gianotti (We Are Unlimited)
Senior Manager, Global Corporate Communications: Terri Hickey (Mcdonalds Usa)
Executive Producer: David Thorne (Furlined)
Head Of Production: Ali Goldstone (Furlined)
Producer: Greg Schultz (Furlined)
Communications Manager, Pr & Brand Engagement: Molly Mckenna Jandrain (Mcdonalds Usa)
Communications Manager: Emily Lyons (Mcdonalds Usa)
Executive Producer: Thatcher Peterson (The Mill)
Producer: Kiana Bicoy (The Mill)
Audio Engineer: Nick Papaleo (The Studio)
Producer: Stacey Simcik (The Studio)
Chief Executive Officer: Brian Nienhaus (We Are Unlimited)
Chief Delivery Officer: Denis Budniewski (We Are Unlimited)
Chief Production Officer: Jon Ellis (We Are Unlimited)
Producer: Justin Casselle (We Are Unlimited)
Director Of Agency Communications: Christie Giera (We Are Unlimited)
Sound Engineer: Rohan Young (Lime)
Executive Producer: Susan Boyajan (Lime)
Outcome:
•Nielsen Study Trial for “$1 any size” soft drinks was the highest of all previous campaigns (Source: Nielsen) •In the first two weeks, the campaign drove an 18,400% increase in search intent (Source: Google Trends)•There were 411,166,83 unique visits per month in earned media (Source: Muckrack) •There were 61 articles published about the campaign (Source: Muckrack) •We attracted
055 organic social campaign mentions on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Facebook (does not include McDonald's or Mindy Kaling posts). (Source: Sprinklr)•Our total paid social impressions were over 275.8M (Source: Google, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram)•YouTube masthead impressions: 274M (Source: YouTube) •Total views for all “Search” campaign content – “Pixelated,” “That Place,” “Secret Identity,” “Beverage Technician,” “Search,” “Cancelled”: 4.2M (Source: YouTube)
Synopsis:
McDonald’s has always been regarded as an iconic American hamburger brand – the largest hamburger fast food chain in the US. Yet very few consider McDonald’s a beverage destination. This spring, the company sought to change that. In April, McDonald’s ran its first national “$1 any size” soft drink campaign to bring guests back into restaurants. Sales forecasts were ambitious, despite strong competition from convenience stores (7-Eleven, Speedway, Circle K, QuikTrip) and quick service restaurants (Sonic, Burger King, Wendy’s, Chick-fil-A, Carl’s Jr.) that have consistently run national beverage promotions at competitive price points (often for less than $1). And while this was a value promotion, 28% of current customers were purchasing their drinks elsewhere because they felt they could get a better deal (Source: TCCC – Mind Gap Study, August 2014). With lack of loyalty and no equity in the beverage promotional space, we needed to tackle this issue differently.
Execution:
On April 11, 2017, we launched the “Search” campaign through a YouTube mobile masthead placement that drove consumers directly to the search results page for “that place where Coke tastes SO good.” Later that evening, during primetime television viewing hours, we began to seed the first television commercial. Throughout that first week, we released several additional television spots on broadcast, online video and a unique YouTube channel. We used the first week of the campaign to introduce people to the conversation already happening online around Coke at McDonald’s. And in the two weeks that followed, once everyone was in on the joke, we had the luxury of continuing to push our $1 Coke message by referencing our own campaign and continuing to be part of topical conversations. Throughout the three-week campaign period we also launched a series of banner ads, radio, print and social to accompany the video work.
Campaign Description:
Using data and social listening, we discovered that there was a much more interesting conversation around our fast food chain’s Coke. In fact, if you Google “that place where Coke tastes SO good,” page after page explains why the Coke tastes so good at our fast food chain. It was already a conversation in pop culture – all we had to do was shine a light on it. We thought the best way to do this was to take the brand entirely out of the conversation with a first-of-its-kind unbranded integrated campaign. By never mentioning the brand, we could tap into second-screen curiosity, driving consumers to perform a search for “that place where Coke tastes SO good.” There’s nothing better than a third-party endorsement and there’s no bigger third-party endorsement than a Google organic search.
Strategy:
We needed something that could differentiate our promotion in a crowded market as we could not win on price alone. For McDonald’s Coke, that was the taste – McDonald’s undeniably serves the best Coke. In fact, there’s a science behind the craft – from the water filtration process to the iconic custom straw. But did consumers know or even care? Social listening revealed an insane level of cultural fandom for McDonald’s Coke. Nearly a third of all conversations about McDonald’s beverages were about our Coke alone. To ensure this sentiment wasn’t just a social niche, we fielded a national study of
000 US adults, asking them, “Of all the places that serve fountain Coke, who has the best?” We found that McDonald’s beat out every fast food competitor 4 to 1. We then looked at organic search queries surrounding McDonald’s Coke, to discover there was an insatiable curiosity about why