Budweiser: Poolball, football on a pool table

Budweiser: Poolball, football on a pool table

Coming to a Buenos Aires pub near you is the newly minted sport of Poolball, created by Ogilvy Argentina for Budweiser.

Two teams meet on a giant 7×3 meter pool table. Fifteen soccer balls are reskinned to look like pool balls. The competitors use their feet instead of cues to score.

A new bar sport with a brand stitched into it

Poolball takes two things that already belong in the same evening. Football and beer. Then it adds a third. The “I could play that” simplicity of pool. The result feels less like a stunt and more like a playable product.

Extractable takeaway: Poolball is a brand activation that fuses two familiar games into one instantly understandable format, so people stop watching and start participating without needing instructions.

The mechanic: one rulebook, two rituals

The mechanic is the entire idea. A pool table scaled up to human size. Pool-ball visuals on footballs. Pool rules translated into foot play. When the mechanic is this legible, the content is self-explaining and the crowd becomes the amplification layer.

BTL is often used as shorthand for below-the-line activity. In practice, it means a brand experience designed to be felt in the real world, then shared because it is worth retelling.

In busy city bars and event spaces, the formats that spread fastest are the ones everyone can read at a glance.

Why it works in a pub

Bar-friendly activations win when they create quick status moments. You either played it, you watched someone nail a shot, or you filmed the chaos. Poolball naturally creates all three, because every “pocket” attempt is a mini highlight.

It also lowers the risk of participation. You are not learning a new sport. You are remixing two you already know, with rules you can copy by watching one play.

The intent behind the fun

The real question is whether your activation is a game people still want to play when the camera is off.

Budweiser is not selling a feature here. It is selling association. Big-game energy. Competitive banter. Social proof that the brand belongs in the centre of group nights out.

When the game is branded but not fragile, the brand becomes the host of the experience rather than the interruption inside it.

Poolball patterns worth stealing

  • Fuse, don’t invent. Combine two known behaviours so the audience understands the format instantly.
  • Make the object the media. A giant playable artefact beats a screen when your goal is participation.
  • Design for highlights. Build in repeatable “shot” moments people want to film and replay.
  • Keep rules visible. If someone can learn it by watching one round, you have the right complexity level.
  • Let branding be structural. Brand the experience itself, not every surface area with logos.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Poolball?

Poolball is a branded game format that combines football and pool. Players kick footballs designed like pool balls on a giant pool table and score using pool-style goals.

Why does this kind of activation travel well across venues?

Because it is easy to understand, easy to spectate, and it produces repeatable highlight moments. Venues like it because it creates crowd energy. Brands like it because the crowd documents it.

What makes the mechanic “shareable” without forcing sharing?

The visual contrast does the work. A human-scale pool table and “pool ball” footballs create an immediate “what is that” reaction, so filming feels natural rather than incentivised.

How do you keep a branded game from feeling like a gimmick?

Make it genuinely playable. Simple rules. Clear scoring. Quick rounds. If the experience is fun without the brand name, the brand credit comes for free.

What’s the minimum viable version of this idea?

A single hybrid rule, one striking physical cue, and one repeatable scoring moment. If people can explain it in one sentence, you have the right foundation.

Liaison Dangereuse: Striptease Shopping

Liaison Dangereuse: Striptease Shopping

Valentine’s lingerie shopping, turned into a show

Liaison Dangereuse, a German lingerie brand, gave Serviceplan a creative challenge: increase lingerie sales around Valentine’s Day.

Seduction always works. So what about making the buying experience attractive and unique for men by giving them the opportunity of buying lingerie directly from the body of beautiful models, and pairing that with a memorable striptease? Thus a new way to sell online lingerie was created.

The mechanism that changes behavior

The idea reframes checkout as participation. Instead of browsing product grids, the customer “shops” from the model, which makes selection feel more like discovery than transaction, and reduces hesitation at the moment of choice.

In European ecommerce and performance marketing, the fastest lever is reducing hesitation by making the path to purchase feel emotionally easy and socially tellable.

The real question is whether you can turn your highest-friction step into a guided, retellable moment without breaking brand trust.

This kind of mechanic is worth copying only when it fits your brand voice and clear consent boundaries.

Why it lands with the intended buyer

This is built for a very specific Valentine’s reality: many male buyers want help choosing, and they want the moment to feel confident, not awkward. A guided, theatrical experience removes indecision and makes the purchase feel like part of the gift.

Extractable takeaway: When the buyer feels unsure about choice, redesign selection so confidence is the default and the mechanic becomes the story.

Earned media as a built-in distribution layer

Serviceplan not only generated free media coverage from major websites, newspapers and magazines in Germany, it also reported additional traffic of 155% to the Liaison Dangereuse website. Reported sales went up by 50% during the promotion.

Click here to watch the video on Ads of the World website.

Steal this conversion mechanic

  • Design for the buyer’s emotion. Remove embarrassment and decision anxiety. Add guided confidence.
  • Make the shopping path the story. If the mechanic is inherently retellable, distribution comes with it.
  • Focus the experience on the highest-friction moment. Choice, not payment, is often the real dropout point.
  • Measure what matters. Track uplift in qualified traffic, add-to-cart rate, and conversion, not just press mentions.

A few fast answers before you act

What is “Striptease Shopping” for Liaison Dangereuse?

It is a Valentine’s-focused ecommerce activation that lets shoppers buy lingerie through a model-led, striptease-style interface, turning product selection into a playful, guided experience.

Who is the experience designed for?

It targets gift-buyers who feel unsure about lingerie choices. The mechanic reduces awkwardness and indecision by making selection feel assisted rather than self-directed.

What is the behavioral mechanism that improves conversion?

It reframes checkout as participation. By turning browsing into a simple, story-like interaction, it reduces hesitation and makes the purchase feel emotionally easy.

Why did it generate strong earned media?

The buying mechanic is unusual and instantly demonstrable. That makes it easy to describe, easy to show, and inherently shareable across press and social channels.

What results were reported from the promotion?

Campaign summaries reported +155% website traffic and +50% sales during the promotion period.

What is the key risk to manage with “seduction” mechanics?

Brand fit and boundaries. If the experience feels exploitative or off-brand, the attention can backfire. The idea needs clear intent, consent, and tone discipline.