Electronic Arts “SSX Shakes”

Gaming giant EA has recently released SSX extreme snowboarding for the Playstation and Xbox360. But before SSX officially hit the slopes in Belgium, EA wanted to generate extra buzz and free press. So their ad agency Duval Guillaume Modem from Antwerp created an exclusive “SSX Shakes” event for a limited audience of popular bloggers and journalists. During the event, they brought the audience in the right mood with booze, snowboarding, music, chicks, tricks… and game play.

The slope had a cocktail bar where the invitees got to choose 1 of the cocktails that were named after a typical snowboard trick. The cocktails however, were not shaken by bartenders but by pro-riders who performed the corresponding snowboard trick and handed it over freshly shaken. Afterwards every blogger and journalist received a personalized movie with the making of his SSX shake to share with friends, fans & followers. 😎

The movies and photos are now available at www.ssxshakes.be

American Express “Twitter Sync”

You sync your American Express card to Twitter, retweet an offer with a specific hashtag, and the reward loads to your card without printing a coupon. For example, tweeting #AmexWholeFoods loads a $20 statement credit that applies when you spend $75 or more at Whole Foods.

The foundation. Couponless offers via Facebook

In July last year, American Express launched a first of its kind application on Facebook called “Link, Like, Love” that allowed card members to link their cards to the app and receive deals based on the likes, interests and social connections of the card members and their Facebook friends.

Members who used this service did not have to print coupons to redeem at a store. Instead, they loaded deals onto their AmEx account by hitting an online button in the app, and the reward was given when they swiped the card at the time of purchase.

The latest move. Sync your card with Twitter

Now, in its latest social venture, American Express allows card members to sync their cards with their Twitter account at sync.americanexpress.com/twitter. After the sync, card members follow @AmericanExpress and re-tweet its special offers that come with exclusive hashtags. The re-tweet loads the card with a couponless reward.

The constraint. Availability by market

The Facebook and Twitter sync work only for US card holders.


A few fast answers before you act

What is American Express Twitter Sync?
A program that lets card members sync an AmEx card to Twitter and load couponless offers by retweeting hashtagged deals.

What does a retweet actually do?
It activates an offer and loads the reward to the synced card, so redemption happens automatically when the card is used.

What is a concrete example of an offer?
Tweeting #AmexWholeFoods loads a $20 statement credit that applies when a purchase of $75 or more at Whole Foods is made.

What do you need to do after syncing?
Follow @AmericanExpress and retweet its special offers that include the required hashtag.

Who can use it?
It is positioned for US card holders.

IKEA Beröra

To launch the iPad version of the IKEA catalogue in Norway, ad agency SMFB created a brand new IKEA product called “Beröra”.

“Beröra” is a sewing kit with a special conductive thread that you sew into the index finger of your favourite gloves. Once the operation is done, the gloves work on a touch screen.

The idea in one clean sentence: Beröra turns any winter glove into a touchscreen glove, so the IKEA catalogue app fits the reality of how people live and move.

A launch mechanic that feels like a product, not a campaign

The smart move is that the “ad” looks and behaves like an IKEA item. A needle, instructions, and conductive thread. Simple enough to DIY, tangible enough to talk about, and useful enough to keep around after the novelty fades.

Conductive thread matters because most touch screens register conductive contact. So the kit essentially makes a glove fingertip “readable” to the device without forcing people to buy specialised tech gloves.

In cold-climate retail markets, the fastest way to accelerate digital adoption is to remove the tiny physical frictions that stop people trying it in the moment.

Results and recognition

The promotion generated a lot of interest. As reported at the time, 12,000 kits went in roughly two weeks, and the IKEA Norway iPad catalogue app broke download records.

The work later picked up awards-circuit recognition, including a One Show merit award, and gold at the Festival of Media in Montreux in the Best Launch Campaign category.

What to steal for your next app launch

  • Turn the barrier into the giveaway. Do not “explain” the friction. Remove it with something people can hold.
  • Make the object shareable offline. A physical product travels through homes, offices, and friend groups faster than a banner ever will.
  • Keep the installation simple. If the user needs a tutorial longer than a minute, the drop-off kills word of mouth.
  • Let the product demonstrate the promise. When the benefit is self-evident, belief comes for free.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Beröra, in plain terms?

Beröra is a DIY conductive-thread sewing kit created for IKEA Norway. You sew the thread into a glove fingertip so it works on touchscreen devices, supporting the launch of IKEA’s iPad catalogue.

Why does a physical kit help launch a digital catalogue?

Because it removes a real-world usage barrier. If people cannot comfortably use a phone or tablet in winter conditions, they will not build the habit. The kit makes the app feel practical, not theoretical.

What makes this a strong “earned media” idea?

It creates a story that is easy to repeat. IKEA made a product that solves a modern annoyance, and it is tied directly to the app being promoted. That combination tends to travel well.

What is the key mechanism that drives engagement here?

Utility creates trial. Trial creates talk. Talk creates downloads. The kit is the trigger that makes the catalogue experience easier, then social sharing does the distribution work.

What should you measure if you do something similar?

Track speed of redemption, install lift during the distribution window, and repeat usage of the app. If you have it, add branded search lift and share-of-voice during the launch period.