Wimpy: Braille Burgers

Wimpy wanted to let visually impaired people know that it offered braille menus in all of its restaurants. Instead of announcing it with a poster, it turned the message into the product itself.

With the help of skilled chefs, sesame seeds were meticulously placed on burger buns so the seeds formed a braille message. The bun becomes a tactile line of communication. You do not have to ask. You can read it with your fingertips.

A message built for the audience

This is a campaign that respects the medium. If the audience reads through touch, the communication should be touchable. The craft is the point. Someone had to care enough to place every seed, because that effort signals the same care the brand claims to have for accessibility.

It is also a quiet reversal of how “accessibility features” often get communicated. Normally, the burden is on the customer to ask for the braille menu. Here, the brand leads with the fact that it is already available.

In mass-market food and retail brands, inclusive design travels fastest when people can discover it in the experience itself rather than having to request it.

The real question is whether accessibility is discoverable by default, or only available to people who already know to ask for it.

Brands should make accessibility features self-revealing inside the product experience, not tucked behind a request.

Why it lands

This works because the message arrives through touch in the moment of use, which removes the “ask” step and makes the accessibility promise instantly usable.

Extractable takeaway: Inclusion marketing lands when the communication channel matches the audience’s access mode. Here, the message is readable by touch at the exact moment of consumption, so the customer discovers the braille-menu promise without needing to ask.

It is specific, not generic. The idea is built around one concrete barrier, then removes it in a way that feels native to the category.

It creates earned attention without begging for it. The story spreads because it is surprising and easily retold. A burger bun you can read is instantly legible as a headline.

It avoids “awareness theater”. By “awareness theater,” I mean symbolic inclusion messaging without a usable change for the customer. The message is not “we support inclusion” in abstract terms. It is “here is the inclusive thing, already made real”.

How to make accessibility discoverable

  • Match the channel to the audience. If your audience cannot access the default channel, redesign the channel. Do not just add copy.
  • Let the product do the talking. The most credible claims show up as a behavior, feature, or ritual inside the experience.
  • Make the proof tactile or visible. When a customer can feel the difference, you do not need to over-explain it.
  • Use craft as a credibility signal. The effort in execution communicates intent more strongly than any tagline.

A few fast answers before you act

What was Wimpy trying to communicate?

That braille menus were available across its restaurants, and that visually impaired customers were welcome without extra friction.

How did the “braille burgers” actually work?

Sesame seeds were placed on the bun in braille patterns that could be read by touch. The braille spelled out a short message or burger description.

Why is this more effective than a standard ad?

Because the audience can directly access the message. It does not depend on sight, and it does not depend on asking staff for information.

What is the business intent behind an inclusion idea like this?

To increase awareness and usage of an accessibility feature, strengthen brand warmth, and reduce the “I did not know you had that” barrier that stops people from choosing the brand.

What is the most transferable lesson?

Build the message in the same mode your audience uses. When the communication format is accessible by design, the campaign becomes self-validating.