via adweek.com
SodaStream is headed back to the Super Bowl,
where it plans to take direct aim at Coke and Pepsi with a 30-second ad
in the fourth quarter of the Feb. 2 game.
The marketer of home soda-making machines was forced to tone down its
ad in this year's game after the company said CBS rejected the original
spot, which showed exploding Coke and Pepsi bottles to dramatize the
environmental pitch that SodaStream could have "saved 500 million
bottles on game day alone."
The 2014 ad has not been submitted for approval because it is still
in development. But "it will be edgy because that is who we are," said
SodaStream International CEO Daniel Birnbaum. "You have to be edgy if
you are challenging and disrupting a big category."
"I hope that [Fox] will be a little more courageous than CBS, because
CBS's behavior was pathetic," he added. "CBS chickened out and they
just didn't want to take a risk of pissing off Coke and Pepsi who are
big, big sponsors of theirs."
CBS declined to comment on Friday. A Fox Sports spokesman said that
"ads cannot be reviewed until submitted, and all ads submitted for
review must meet Fox's standards for broadcast."
SodaStream received a wave of free publicity as a result of the 2013
rejected ad, which it distributed digitally. "We never intended to be
banned, but the end result was we got about 5 million views on YouTube,
which we didn't pay for," Mr. Birnbaum said.
SodaStream has not picked an agency for the 2014 ad. But Mr. Birnbaum said former CP&B
exec Alex Bogusky, who worked on the 2013 ad, is on the company's short
list. "I loved working with Alex and he really brings an edge," he
said.
The company sought a fourth-quarter time slot because it wanted to
follow any Coke and Pepsi ads, Mr. Birnbaum said. (PepsiCo is sponsoring
halftime and is planning to air two 30-second beverage ads, while
Coca-Cola has yet to confirm its Super Bowl plans.) Mr. Birnbaum said he
expects his soda competitors to use their ads to talk "about happiness
and love and all those beautiful attributes in life."
As SodaStream grows -- its machines are now available in more than
60,000 retail stores in 45 countries -- it has adopted mainstream
marketing techniques, including partnering with big food companies such
as Kraft Foods Group. Co-branded flavor versions include Kool-Aid,
Country Time and Crystal Light. The company also recently announced a
deal with Cooking Light magazine, whose logo will adorn two new flavors:
Passionfruit-Mango and Kiwi-Pear.
Fox is expected to fetch roughly $4 million for 30 seconds in the
Super Bowl. Mr. Birnbaum said that amount roughly equals what SodaStream
typically pays for TV advertising over three months in the U.S. The
Super Bowl investment is a "big decision" and "we don't take it
lightly," he said. But it's "bigger than the money," he added. "It's a
statement that we have arrived."
According to Kantar Media, SodaStream spent $15 million on measured
media in 2012. In the first half of 2013 it spent $11 million, including
$4.5 million on network TV during the first quarter.
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