Coca-Cola Second Screen Reinvented

You are watching a Coca-Cola TV spot in Israel. Your phone lights up. A “Gett Coca-Cola” prompt appears. You tap once. Five minutes later, a special Coca-Cola package shows up at your door: a branded cooler, two Coke bottles, and a bottle opener.

The idea in one line

Turn a TV ad into a one-tap order, and make “second screen” mean immediate delivery, not just engagement.

What is actually happening on the second screen

The TV spot carries an audio trigger that a smartphone can recognize. The moment the ad plays, phones with the Gett app installed receive a push notification. The viewer swipes or taps, and the order is placed in one click.

In practice, this behaves like Shazam for commerce. Except the payoff is not identification. It is fulfillment.

Why the Gett partnership is the real unlock

The ad is only half the experience. The other half is logistics.

To make the “five minutes later” promise credible, Coca-Cola partners with Gett, a local taxi app, and during the promotion Gett dispatches thousands of vehicles packed with branded coolers across Israel, ready to deliver on demand.

Why this feels like a reinvention of TV, not a gimmick

It collapses the funnel

There is no gap between awareness and action. The moment of attention is the moment of purchase.

It turns “sampling” into a media format

The campaign is a TV impression plus product trial, delivered instantly.

It makes the second screen earn its place

Second screen ideas often stop at polls and hashtags. Here, the phone is not a companion. It is the checkout button.

The deeper point

This is what “buyable advertising” looks like when it is engineered end to end. Media triggers action. Action triggers logistics. Logistics completes the brand promise while attention is still warm.


A few fast answers before you act

What does the TV ad do that is different?

It uses an audio trigger so phones can recognize the ad and prompt a “Gett Coca-Cola” order on the second screen.

Do viewers need anything installed for this to work?

Yes. The flow depends on the Gett app, since the notification and one-tap order happens inside Gett.

How does it deliver so fast?

Gett uses its taxi network as a delivery fleet, with cars preloaded with the cooler kits during the promotion.

Why is this more powerful than a “second screen” hashtag?

Because the second screen is not commentary. It is conversion plus fulfillment.

What is the main risk brands must manage?

User trust. Any experience that “listens” for triggers must be transparent and permissioned, or it will feel creepy, even if the mechanics work.

Sveriges Radio Plus

Right now, most second screen experiences push content to the user but do very little by way of two-way interactivity. That however is slowly changing and can already be seen in the TV based second screen experiences from Heineken and Chevy.

Now in one of the first examples of second screen experiences that I have seen with radio, Swedish ad agency Forsman & Bodenfors has attempted to make the whole radio experience more visual, interactive, and shareable.

With a new radio player called “Swedish Radio Plus” they allowed people on computers and mobile devices to listen in on the radio programs and simultaneously add videos, pictures, comments, maps and polls to the radio timeline. All post made on this custom timeline were also shared on the users Facebook profile, with a link to that exact part of the program.

To give it a try yourself visit the demo page here.