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PR Success Stories: Chiquita Banana Press Release Campaign by Zenzi Communications

chiquita bananaZenzi Communications is working with Chiquita on a PR campaign that promotes Chiquita Banana Sticker Design Contest. The contest that ran between June 21, 2010 and July 18, 2010, invited consumers to visit www.EatAChiquita.com and put their own spin on the company’s iconic brand image. The purpose of the campaign, was: “to encourage consumers to interact with the Chiquita brand and make the brand their own.” – as Judy Chen, Corporate Marketing Group Leader at Chiquita, stated in the official press release.

It’s this press release we will be discussing today, in the pilot of the PR Success Stories: The Press Release series that begins today at Everything PR News and will bring you a new case-study every Thursday, weekly. With such real-case studies from various PR companies around the world, we hope to give you a strong basis for your future endeavors.

In an exclusive interview, via HARO, Zenzi’s Senior Account Executive Erin Coller told us that the official press release has resulted in 26,792,425 impressions to date, all from direct pick-up of the release.

The press release went live on Jun 22, 2010; and it was distributed via Business Wire. Among the PR strategies used in this particular campaign, Zenzi also developed creative banana press to continue momentum of widespread coverage in print and online; targeted design blogs and industry media and promoted the contest via Facebook and Twitter to design/art schools, graphic designers, and marketers.

Lessons from Zenzi’s Chiquita Press Release

Press Releases Work

You probably heard many times that press releases don’t work. Only an unskilled marketer can make such a claim. Press releases do work: they need the right angle and an appropriate hook. A contest, like the one organized by Chiquita, cannot appeal to a professional designer like David Airey for example. But it does appeal to teenagers who enjoy playing with an online game, and it also appeals to other people with artistic inclination. Plus… it’s fun.

The most important aspect, however, is the appeal to a young market segment – which is a brilliant strategy. In the end, Chiquita’s consumers don’t really belong to a clear segment of the population. Who doesn’t go bananas for bananas? But building brand loyalty from an early age is important in this business. Chiquita has to compete against Bonita, Del Monte and Dole, all very strong brands. And every little helps.

Why did the press release generate so many impressions? The title, for one, is brilliant. Other than that, Zenzi had the advantage of working with a keyword combination that generates approximately 245 searches a day (“Chiquita banana”) and a brand name that is searched by 326 people daily in average. In addition to search engine traffic, Zenzi employed social media, and promoted the contest avidly to other online publications and printed publications.

The contest will now be added to the “wall of fame” of how crowdsourcing could be used in a PR campaign. And Chiquita is not the only example. To date, the United States Postal Service (ergo a US federal institution) is running two such contests on Prova.fm for its Hawaii Priority Mail Large Flat Rate Boxes. Crowdsourcing is a great way to boost brand awareness and to encourage customers to interact with the brand. It’s the future of marketing, whether anti-spec advocates like it or not. Sure, the practice can only be fair when the prizes become fairer. Some promotional items worth 36 USD per package don’t really fall in the category, but this is not the matter in discussion now.

We are discussing a press release and its strategy, and the conclusions are easy to resume: a great title, very good use of keywords, brilliant employment of social media strategies.  Zenzi is definitely a PR company that can put together a successful campaign. They have the writing skills, the talent and the passion needed to spread the message.

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