IKEA: Paul “The Chair”

For years, a street performer has been playing on chairs outside Warsaw Central Station. Locals call him Paul “The Chair”.

JWT Warsaw turns that real-world detail into a simple social mechanic for IKEA. In practice, that means a repeatable audience action and brand response that people can join and watch unfold. Let the people who follow IKEA Warsaw decide which chairs Paul should test next, then publish the results back on the IKEA Poland Facebook page. The campaign claims the loop worked fast. Within seven days, IKEA Warsaw fans reportedly increased by 70%.

From street credibility to Facebook voting

The mechanic is a fan vote with a built-in payoff. The audience chooses the chair. Paul tests it. IKEA posts the result. That structure converts passive scrolling into a repeatable reason to come back, because every vote creates anticipation for the next video.

In social-led retail marketing, giving viewers control over what gets demonstrated turns content into participation rather than promotion.

Why it lands

This works because the “expert” is not a paid spokesperson archetype. It is a recognizable local character with a believable, slightly odd credential. Seven years of playing chairs in public. The voting layer also makes the brand feel less like it is broadcasting and more like it is hosting. People are not just watching furniture content. They are steering it, and that makes sharing and returning feel earned.

Extractable takeaway: If your product range is broad and hard to browse, create a recurring format where the audience picks the next item, and make the result public quickly so the loop trains repeat attention.

What IKEA is really buying

The real question is whether IKEA can turn chair browsing into a repeatable act of participation instead of another passive product feed.

The stronger play here is product familiarity through participation, not fan growth for its own sake. The immediate goal is fan growth and interaction, but the deeper goal is product familiarity. Repeated exposure to specific chair models. Subtle proof of sturdiness and usability. A social reason to talk about chairs without sounding like a catalogue.

What retail marketers can lift from this

  • Borrow a credible “tester”. Find a person whose real-life behavior makes them a believable evaluator of your category.
  • Let the audience choose. A simple vote is enough to create ownership and return visits.
  • Close the loop fast. The shorter the time between vote and result, the more the mechanic feels alive.
  • Make each post an episode. Recurrence beats one-off virality for retail ranges.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the core idea of “Paul The Chair”?

IKEA turns chair testing into a recurring social series by letting fans vote on which chairs a local performer, Paul “The Chair”, should test next.

Why does the audience vote matter?

Voting converts attention into commitment. People are more likely to return and share when they helped choose what happens next.

What does this teach about product-range marketing?

You do not need to explain the whole range. You need an ongoing format that makes individual items discoverable one at a time.

What is the key credibility lever here?

The tester’s story. A real person associated with chairs in public life makes the premise feel less like advertising and more like a local truth.

What is the biggest execution risk?

If the results content feels slow, repetitive, or over-produced, the vote becomes a gimmick and the loop stops rewarding repeat attention.

Heineken Italy Activation

One of the most sacred moments for a lot of guys is watching football with friends. But as time goes by, that moment is increasingly at risk. So Heineken, with the help of ad agency JWT Italy, decided to remind their audience of what is at stake, right on the evening of a UEFA Champions League match: Real Madrid vs AC Milan.

A prank built around a real tension

The craft here is that Heineken does not try to “own football” with another sponsor message. It stages a situation that dramatizes the threat to the ritual, then resolves it in a way that feels like a reward for fans.

How the activation works

In simple terms, this is an activation. That is an in-person experience designed to trigger conversation, participation, and earned sharing, not just impressions.

The setup plays on a familiar dynamic. Partners and friends pull football fans away from the match with an alternative plan, then the brand flips the evening by revealing the game and turning the “loss” into a surprise watch party moment.

In European football culture, match nights are one of the last reliably shared rituals. Brands that win here do it by protecting the ritual, not interrupting it.

Why it lands

This works because it is built on empathy. It starts with a truth about modern life and competing plans, then turns the brand into the friend who restores the moment. It is entertainment with a clear social payoff, not entertainment for its own sake. The real question is whether your brand can credibly protect the ritual instead of borrowing its attention.

Extractable takeaway: If you can turn a threatened shared moment into a felt relief, the brand earns a role people want to talk about, not just a logo people saw.

A useful way to phrase the mechanism is this. If you can make people feel you defended their time with their friends, they will remember you differently than a logo on a perimeter board.

Business intent: earn affinity, then earn retell

Heineken is not just chasing attention. It is buying a story that people want to retell the next day. That story carries the positioning in a way a standard spot cannot. Heineken. Made to entertain.

Steal this for ritual-protecting activations

  • Start with a threatened ritual. If the audience feels a real loss, the payoff lands harder.
  • Make the brand the rescuer, not the interrupter. The reveal should feel like relief, not a sales pitch.
  • Design for retelling. If a friend cannot explain it in 20 seconds, it will not travel.
  • Let the product stay in the background. The memory is the asset. The label is just the signature.

A few fast answers before you act

What is an “activation” in marketing terms?

An activation is a designed experience, often live or in the real world, that drives participation and sharing. Its output is conversation and earned media, not only paid reach.

Why do ritual-based activations work so well?

Because rituals are emotionally protected. If a brand can credibly defend a ritual, it earns affinity that is hard to replicate with standard advertising.

What is the core mechanism in this Heineken example?

Create a credible threat to a valued moment, then flip it into a surprise payoff where the brand is the enabler of the restored experience.

What needs to be true for a prank activation to feel positive?

The audience must feel safe and rewarded at the end. The reveal has to resolve the tension quickly, and the outcome must be better than what they expected.

How do you measure success for this kind of work?

Look for retell signals and intent signals. Retell signals are evidence people repeat the story to others. Intent signals are evidence people take a next step, like searching, visiting, or asking where to buy.