Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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2016 'It' Toy Already Sold Out, Leaving Parents In A Panic

2016 'It' Toy Already Sold Out, Leaving Parents In A Panic | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Toronto's Spin Master has done it again. The toy company that brought kids to a fervour over Zoomer robotic pets has created the hottest toy of 2016: Hatchimals. But they're already sold out everywhere, leaving parents in a panic.

WTF is a Hatchimal? Good question.

Imagine a large, speckled egg that hatches as a result of touch and sound. Inside, your child will find a bright, fuzzy robotic creature. It could be a Draggle, Penguala, Owlicorn, Burtle or Bearakeet (don't worry if you can't tell the difference, they look pretty similar.) That's when the fun starts. Kids then teach it to walk, talk and play using specific phrases.

"Hatchimals incorporate the very best elements of nurturing play with the interactivity of robotics in a truly innovative and entertaining way," Ben Varadi, Spin Master's chief creative officer, said in a press release. "This is one of the most unique products Spin Master has ever launched and we're confident that the consumer response will be strong."

Well, that's putting it mildly. The toy retails between $60 and $90 and it has sold out online everywhere. Sears, Toys R Us, Mastermind, Chapters... no one has it....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Coolest 2016 toy is already sold out. Watch the parent panic begin.

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Social Scanner: The art of the viral stunt video | Marketing Magazine

Social Scanner: The art of the viral stunt video | Marketing Magazine | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

...In the ad coffee shop customers witness a Carrie-style freak out (spoiler: it’s an ad for Carrie) in which a young actress “moves” books, chairs and a stuntman with her mind. Since being published Monday, it has racked up 19 million views.


The ad is the latest in a long line of marketing stunt videos. Popular recent hits include Pepsi getting NASCAR's Jeff Gordon to torment a car salesman and an unsuspecting beer drinker undergoing a terrible job interview that turns out to be a Heineken-crafted prank. In Canada, VMG Cinematic helped make a stunt-style video of a seemingly supernatural catch by pro baseball player Evan Longoria that turned out to be – surprise – an ad for Gillette.The reason each spread so successfully on social media is the element of surprise. Something unexpected or unbelievable happened, delightfully surprising the viewer before the reveal came that the video is an ad....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Learn the secrets of viral video marketing.

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