Did You Mean MailChimp?
In devising the campaign, MailChimp and its ad agency, Droga5, drew inspiration from a 2014 audio ad on the cult podcast Serial in which a 13-year-old girl had trouble pronouncing its name: “Mail—Kimp?” The MailKimp ad went wildly viral, but the two firms knew better than try to exploit it on social media. Instead they created an ecosystem of additive and playful experiences, among them a hit single, an oddball brand of potato chips and a series of short films about singing sandwiches and kale-covered puppy dogs. They even put up billboards that linked these all together. FailChips, MailShrimp, KaleLimp—this lighthearted and entertaining approach, coupled with a paid search strategy that took anyone asking about one of them straight to MailChimp, is what merited the campaign’s inclusion in Columbia’s Digital Dozen.
“Yes, someone is manufacturing bags of smashed potato chip dust. . . .
“If, by this point, you were beginning to wonder, ‘Is this product so ridiculous that it is actually a viral marketing campaign designed to trick me?’ the answer is, ‘Yes!’”