Mini “money trucks” deliver one million cents to a Media Markt contest winner in a filmed cash-stunt convoy.

Media Markt “Money Trucks”

A security team clears the street in a quiet neighborhood. Neighbors step outside. Then a tiny convoy rolls in. 193 miniature “money trucks”, each loaded with 1-cent coins, drives up to the winner’s home and unloads one million cents into a growing pile in the driveway. It is a cash delivery staged like a movie scene, except the payoff is real.

The idea in one line

Celebrate a social milestone by turning “one million” into a physical spectacle people can watch, share, and retell.

What Media Markt does to mark 1 million Facebook fans

Over the last couple of years I have seen a handful of brands reach the 1 million fans milestone. To celebrate, most of them create really nice and innovative thank-you videos. A good example is Tic Tac “Likes” Matt. Media Markt hits the same milestone, but takes a very different route. It turns the number into a physical stunt people can watch, share, and retell.

Media Markt on reaching 1 million fans on Facebook launched a contest: “How many small trucks do you need to transport 1,000,000 cents?” The activation was created by Ogilvy & Mather Frankfurt.

How the campaign plays out

Step 1. Start with a guess that feels simple and sticky

The mechanic is deliberately basic: one question, one number, one prize framed as a million small units. It is easy to participate, and easy to share.

Step 2. Make the prize physically absurd

The winner does not receive a bank transfer. She receives €10,000 as 1-cent coins, delivered using the exact number of miniature trucks the contest asks people to estimate.

Step 3. Turn delivery into content

The delivery is filmed as a “cash-in-transit” moment: security clearing streets, convoy arriving, coins dumped into a heap. The documentation becomes the story asset that travels beyond Facebook.

The numbers that make it feel “earned”

  • The correct answer is 193 trucks.
  • The winner is in Saßmicke (western Germany), and the stunt is played as a neighborhood event, not a private handover.

Why it works

It converts an online number into a physical reality

“One million fans” is abstract. One million coins is instantly legible, and the convoy makes the number feel even bigger.

The stunt is engineered for repeatable media beats

Announcement. Guessing phase. Winner selection. Convoy “journey” updates. Final delivery video. The campaign creates multiple moments people can follow, not one single post.

It is brand-consistent in one glance

Electronics retail competes in a world of deals and hype. This behaves like a deal, but acts like a story. The spectacle fits the loud, “big gesture” brand posture without needing product claims.

The deeper point

If you want people to care about a community milestone, do not announce the number. Stage the number. Make it participatory, then make the payoff visual enough that the community wants to distribute it for you.


A few fast answers before you act

What is the campaign mechanic?

A Facebook contest asks fans to guess how many miniature trucks are needed to transport one million cents.

What is the actual prize?

€10,000 delivered as 1,000,000 one-cent coins, transported by 193 miniature trucks.

Why does the “193 trucks” detail matter?

Because it closes the loop. The answer is not just “correct”. It becomes the logistics and the spectacle of the payout.

Who creates the campaign?

Ogilvy & Mather Frankfurt.

What is the reusable pattern?

Turn a social milestone into a simple prediction game, then make the reward delivery so visual that it becomes the main distribution asset.