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Will Carlsberg’s brave new strategy succeed? Probably

Will Carlsberg's brave new strategy succeed? Probably

INTERNET MARKETING NEWS

Will Carlsberg’s brave new strategy succeed? Probably

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It started innocuously enough at the beginning of the month. Organic tweets about Carlsberg beer were being picked up and promoted by the Danish brewing company. Nothing special there; more than one marketing genius has attempted to blend the authenticity of organic social media posts with the reach of digital by combining them into a single hybrid campaign.

But it was the tenor of the tweets that Carlsberg selected that struck more than a few people as, well, strange. Rather than promoting the overall wonderfulness of Carlsberg, the brewer seemed intent on finding the very worst comments about its beer and then promoting these messages to all and sundry.

When Jamayal Khan took to Twitter to inform 600 followers in and around Huddersfield that Carlsberg tasted like “naan bread” he was not being complimentary. And he was probably not expecting the brewer to turn up five years later and start promoting his tweet nationally.

Meanwhile, down in Plymouth, Harleigh must have been surprised when her old tweet from a year ago about Carlsberg tasting “like stale bread-sticks” was picked up by the brewer.

Similarly, Roy’s tweet describing the beer as like “drinking the bath water that your Nan died in” was an unlikely one to be picked up and promoted. As was that of Afterglow85, who likened the beer to the “rancid piss of Satan”, only to then be approached by Carslberg asking for her permission to reuse the “endorsement”.

The tactic quickly attracted the attention of social media. Many speculated the unlikely promotional strategy was the action of a disaffected ex-marketer or perhaps a new AI system gone wrong. But it became apparent this week that Carlsberg knew exactly what it was doing.

For 40 years Carlsberg promoted itself as ‘Probably the best lager in the world’. The killer strapline emerged during the evening before a pitch by boutique advertising agency KMP. Agency executive Tony Bodinetz had created some draft scripts to present to Carlsberg’s UK marketing team. But in the hotel the night before the big meeting his business partner David McLaren was unconvinced.

He was worried Bodinetz had done too far with the slogan ‘The best lager in the world’ and told him so. They argued, went to bed and the next morning Bodinetz appended the word ‘Probably’ to the front of the slogan to appease McLaren.

The rest, as they say in ad land, is history. Carlsberg loved the offbeat wording and eventually employed Orson Welles to deliver a voiceover that became as famous as the slogan itself. Carlsberg’s ads defined premium beer drinking for a generation.

But was one bijou problem with positioning Carlsberg as probably the best on the planet. The idea might have appealed to consumers. It might also have differentiated the brand from its competitors. But the brewery singularly failed to deliver on this promise, especially in more recent years.

As the beer category premiumised in this country and as smaller, independent breweries produced a growing number of fantastic lagers and ales, Carlsberg and its outdated claims of superiority became increasingly unlikely and unloved. Sales of Carlsberg in this country have not kept pace with the category. Something had to be done.

READ MORE: Carlsberg admits it probably isn’t the best beer in the world as it overhauls the brand and the brew

Eventually the brewer dropped the slogan and came up with the anemic, but painless ‘That calls for a Carlsberg’. But, as is almost always the case, the brand and its heritage were intertwined far too closely in the consumer consciousness for such blunt acts of repositioning to actually work.

As so many brands have discovered over the years, the ancient tactics of yesteryear – and the hundreds of millions of pounds of investment that have gone into them since their inception – mean heritage is an invaluable asset that should not be changed or underestimated.

So Carlsberg is taking a chance. It is tipping its hat to a heritage that everybody recognises and then riffing on it to reflect the fact that Carlsberg has moved upmarket and, allegedly, improved the taste of its beer. It is now admitting it is ‘Probably not the best beer in the world‘.

The next phase of the campaign features Carlsberg employees reading reviews from customers lambasting the taste of the beer. Alongside that digital campaign comes the new product campaign explaining how and why the Carlsberg team have radically improved the brewery’s best selling pilsner from “head to hop”.

One assumes the brewery will continue to open the throttle in the weeks ahead with more channels and more support for a new, rebrewed Carlsberg. Could there be some TV in the pipes? Methinks so.

Who knows whether it will work, but credit must be given to the Carlsberg marketing team. This feels like a great campaign in its early, formative stages. For starters its clearly an approach that has been born from insight and then honed with solid strategic thinking.

The Carlsberg team were caught in an unlikely pincer trap of a strapline that boasts superiority for a beer that desperately needed to improve itself. It’s a quietly brilliant move to make that misplaced superiority the basis for the new campaign and product refresh.

On a simpler level the engagement the campaign has already achieved is sensational. That will translate into talk down the pub and all-important trial from customers that have not had a Carlsberg since their nan passed.

Whether the beer will actually pass muster is another question, but over the Easter weekend (Christ is risen, let’s get down the Dog and Duck for a lock-in) there will be army of semi-arseholed punters pontificating over the merits of the campaign, the old taste of the famed Danish beer and its new formulation. Saliency combined with on-brand discussions in other words. Marketing nirvana.

READ MORE: ‘Tastes like stale breadsticks’: Carlsberg’s ‘disruptive’ Twitter campaign tackles criticism of its beer head on

And I will add something else to the rationale for suspecting this might be a great new campaign. It’s brave.

I don’t mean brave in the usual brand purpose ‘cleaning the world’s toilets one bowl at a time for the children’ way. In the purpose-addled, fake-humble world of marketing these days the only brave people are the ones pointing out what a load of bollocks brand purpose actually is.

I mean that Carlsberg is brave because it has risked everything and gone large on this campaign. Making fun of yourself and then using that platform to revitalise the brand is a hugely risky move.

And yet it has to be bold and risky to have a chance of working. I have been working in America with the Effies organisation on something special for its 50th anniversary later this year, and one of the recurring themes that jumps out of half a century of great advertising is that it has to be brave to work. Bravery does not guarantee success, but without it you might as well go home and burn your marketing budget on the stove.

Carlsberg could have got some moronic marketer to bang on about ‘bringing people together through the miracle of shared occasions’. Or they could have launched some inane product campaign talking about Peruvian hops and crystal streams of Scandic water. And in both instances, and a hundred others, the campaign and the brand would have wasted its effort and disappeared quickly from view.

Instead, Carlsberg has caused a fuss and it deserves credit because, like all sudden marketing events, it has been long in the planning.



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