Billboard Fan Check Machine

You walk up to a Billboard Magazine dispenser, plug in your iPhone, and let the machine scan your music library. If it finds more than 20 songs by the artist on the cover, it dispenses a free copy of the magazine.

How the Fan Check Machine works

Not every music fan reads Billboard Magazine, but every music fan has music on their phone. Ogilvy & Mather Brazil turns that into a simple proof-of-fandom mechanic. The dispenser gives away a free magazine only when the listener’s library shows real affinity for the featured artist.

Why this format feels fair to fans

The exchange is transparent. You do not enter a sweepstake or fill a form. You prove you are genuinely into the artist on the cover, and you get rewarded immediately. That immediacy makes the activation memorable, and the “fan verified” moment becomes the story people share.

What this teaches about shopper activations

This is a strong pattern for retail and event environments. Use an existing behaviour as the credential, keep the threshold clear, and make the reward instant. When the rule is simple and the payoff is immediate, participation scales without staff explaining it over and over.


A few fast answers before you act

What is the Billboard Fan Check Machine?

It is a magazine dispenser that gives away a free Billboard issue if you can prove you are a fan of the cover artist by plugging in your iPhone and scanning your music library.

What is the “fan” threshold in this activation?

If the machine finds more than 20 songs by the artist on the cover of Billboard Magazine, you get the magazine for free.

Why does “proof of fandom” beat generic giveaways?

Because it targets real fans and makes the reward feel earned. That increases perceived fairness, reduces waste, and creates a stronger story than a random handout.

What should you keep simple if you replicate this pattern?

The rule, the verification step, and the payoff. People should understand the requirement instantly, complete it in seconds, and receive the reward without friction.

Emart Flying Store

In May 2012, Emart created the Sunny Sale campaign which distributed coupons through a sun activated QR Code. Now in their latest campaign they have created “Flying Stores” which are nothing but truck-shaped balloons fitted with a Wifi router. 😎

These special balloon stores were floated in every corner of Seoul and people who could not get to an Emart store during the day, could then easily hook on to the balloons Wi-Fi signal and order directly online. As a result, Emart sales soared both in online and offline stores. Mobile sales increased by 157% and the E-Mart app got downloaded more than 50,000 times during the promotion month.

Also click here to see the 2011 flying fish balloons campaign done for the Sea Life park in Speyer, Germany.

Mobile Orchestra

In the last weeks I came across two campaigns that revolved around Mobile Orchestra. So I decided to bundle them together…

The Philharmoniker Hamburg Acousticons App

Draft FCB was given the task to bring the Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra and its classical music back to life by addressing a younger audience. So an “Acousticons App” was created that allowed people to chat just like in any other messenger app, but with a wide range of musical emoticons that let one feel the emotional power of classical music through the text messages. The App also contained the current season’s programme and a direct link to order tickets.

The Czech National Symphony Orchestra for Hello Bank!

To promote a new “all-digital” bank in Europe called Hello Bank!, BNP Paribas and ad agency B-Roll wired up 60 musicians with smartphones and tablets for a rousing rendition of “Carmen.”