Sahil Bloom Profile picture
Jul 6, 2021 24 tweets 10 min read Read on X
I recently asked my audience: What is the most genius marketing campaign of all time?

I got 2,000+ responses.

THREAD: 20 of the most iconic marketing and advertising campaigns in history:
De Beers “Diamonds are Forever”

Arguably the most iconic, controversial, and impactful marketing campaign in history.

Created the massive, global diamond industry.

(Note: This will be the subject of a future thread…)
Coke vs. Pepsi Superman Battle

Pepsi ran the Halloween ad on the left. Coke responded with the ad on the right.

Game, set, match.

h/t @perfexcellent
The Original Apple iPod Campaign

“1,000 songs in your pocket”

Simple, intuitive, genius.
Starbucks Wrong Names on Cups

Starbucks employees writing the names of millions of customers in hilariously wrong ways to get them to post the images across social media with Starbucks branding.

For free.

h/t @SleepwellCap
Coca-Cola “Buy the World a Coke”

Released in 1971, but way ahead of its time. Invoked a deep sense of humanity and togetherness never before seen in the world of marketing and advertising.

h/t @jposhaughnessy
Snickers “Not Going Anywhere for a While?”

Positioned a Snickers bar as a robust meal with a compelling ad that captured the audience until the punchline.

h/t @waitbutwhy
Bitcoin Laser Eyes

A simple, clear signal of membership in a community.
Patek Philippe "You Never Actually Own a Patek Philippe"

Legacy, craftsmanship, and pride.

h/t @marketplunger1
Volkswagen “Think Small” and “Lemon”

Creativity in crafting a unique selling proposition to the customer.

h/t @nick_dewilde @ErinBoothVA
Parental Advisory Explicit Content

Made an entire generation of kids 100x more likely to purchase an album…

h/t @parisofprairie
Coca-Cola Santa Claus

The modern day red and white imagery of Santa Claus was created by a Coca-Cola 1920s holiday marketing campaign.

h/t @theashelina
Durex Father’s Day

An unbelievably creative, product-relevant dagger into the heart of the competition.

h/t @luxconduct
Apple “Think Different”

Iconic is an understatement.
Avis “No. 2”

Creative campaign focused on why being #2 is a competitive advantage.

h/t @EarlyStageSales
Lego Airplane

Simple and imaginative. Invokes a feeling of child-like wonder and curiosity.

h/t @MDelhez
Gatorade “Be Like Mike”

Used one of the greatest athletes of all time to convince young and aspiring athletes everywhere that a sugary performance beverage was the key to their success.
Porsche “Honestly…”

Clean imagery with a touch of swagger.

h/t @lozza_hayes
Dollar Shave Club “Our Blades are F****** Great”

The campaign that drove Dollar Shave Club from 0 to a $1 billion acquisition...

h/t @FintechOrama
Patagonia “Don’t Buy This Jacket”

Pushed the brand’s core values while stoking significant intrigue in new and prospective customers. Brilliant and effective.

h/t @_rachelbraun
Got Milk?

A brilliant push by the dairy industry that positioned milk as a superfood at the center of a healthy, balanced diet.

It worked. If you grew up in the 90s, you believed it.
There are so many more. What are your favorites that I am missing?

Enjoy this? Follow me @SahilBloom for more interesting threads on business.

And subscribe to my newsletter, where I share curiosity-inducing, high-signal content every week. It’s free! sahilbloom.substack.com
And here is the original tweet for anyone who is interested!
Bonus (because I somehow omitted it!)…

Nike “Just Do It”

One of the most iconic campaigns in history. Nike was no longer just for elite athletes - the campaign made everyone feel like they could accomplish great things.

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More from @SahilBloom

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Jun 17
Random question that I’m genuinely curious about: Why don’t commercial airplanes have an eject button?

Like a button that can be pressed if the plane is about to crash that shoots off the top and every seat ejects with a little parachute.

Is it a cost issue? Engineering impossibility?

I have to imagine people would pay more to know they had a better (say 80% higher) chance of survival in the event of a catastrophic failure.

Just something that I’ve always wondered about and now I want to know the answer to.
Even if you assume it still has some hazards and issues (in air collisions post ejection, parachute deployment issues, etc.) if you could get to 80% survival rather than ~0% survival in a catastrophic failure, I bet people would opt to fly a more expensive airline that had this.
The only logic I can think of is that it’s so rare that it’s not worth putting money behind fixing.

But if people would pay for it, why not?

The fear of crashes is outsized relative to their incidence, so I bet there’s a premium/margin to be made on offering this.
Read 6 tweets

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