George M Profile picture
Dec 23 13 tweets 4 min read Read on X
In 1992, Hoover launched a promotion so catastrophically stupid, It destroyed Britain's most trusted brand overnight,

And even forced the Queen to take action.

Here's the untold story of the biggest marketing disaster in history 🧵 Image
It’s 1992 and Britain is in recession.

Hoover's profits had dropped from $147M to $74M.

They needed a plan to sell thousands of unsold vacuums.

Then the marketing team came with an idea:
What if we gave away flights to Europe and America...

With every £100 Hoover purchase?'

And pair it with a catchy slogan like...

'Two free flights! Unbelievable!'

But why would they make such an insane decision?
Their 'brilliant' plan?

Make the paperwork so complex that after buying the Hoover, people wouldn't bother claiming the tickets.

Buyers had to:

Send forms within 14 days. Fill complex paperwork. Face constant rejections.

The British public had other plans...
They expected 50,000 claims.

They got 300,000.

Every customer spending the minimum £100.

Every customer demanding their £600 flights.

Hoover's nightmare was just beginning...
Hoover tried everything:

Rejected valid claims.

Sent forms on Christmas Eve.

Offered airports hundreds of miles away.

Then customers did something unexpected: Image
They organized.

Created pressure groups.

Flew to America to confront executives.

Got the BBC involved.

The story was about to explode: Image
The numbers were crazy:

£30M in sales turned into £100M+ in losses

220,000 got flights

350,000 never did

Hoover's reputation was crumbling Image
The BBC exposed it all:

Executives were fired

Lawsuits flooded in

Thousands of customers demanded justice

Then the Queen made her move: Image
For the first time in 84 years,

The Royal Family stripped away their warrant.

Hoover, once Britain's most trusted brand,

Was now its biggest disgrace.

But that wasn't the worst part:
The aftermath was brutal:

Market share crashed from 50% to 10%

Thousands of unwanted vacuums flooded stores

The company was sold to competitors at an £81M loss

A single promotion destroyed an empire.
The lesson?

1. Never promise what you can't deliver
2. Never underestimate your customers
3. Never think you can outsmart the public
4. Never add a promo gift better than your product

Today, this case is taught in every business school.
300,000 customers made sure of it.
I hope you've found this thread helpful.

Follow me @GeorgeM_Growth for more.

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More from @GeorgeM_Growth

Dec 24
2003: Five Guys was dying against McDonald's and Wendy's.

5 struggling stores. Empty restaurants. Shrinking profits.

Then they made ONE move their competitors never saw coming.

Today: A $2B burger empire. Here's the full story: 🧵 Image
Their strategy was deceptively simple:

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The psychology was genius:

When we receive something unexpected:

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Nobel Prize winner Robert Cialdini called this 'Reciprocity
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4 years later, lawsuits, angry customers, and chaos destroyed everything.

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MrBeast’s pitch was simple:

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No one expected what came next.
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Dec 18
IN 2004, Blockbuster was one of the USA's biggest companies, worth $1,2 billion with over 9,000 stores.

By 2010, they were completely bankrupt...

Not because of competition - but because of ONE fatal choice...

Here's the biggest business self-sabotage in history (and how to avoid it): 🧵Image
It's 2000, and Blockbuster owns entertainment:

• 43 million members
• $300M in late fees alone
• A new store every 17 hours

One meeting was about to change everything...
A young Reed Hastings, Netflix's founder, walks into Blockbuster's Dallas HQ:

His company was tiny:

DVD rentals by mail

His revenue was minimal, struggling to survive.

Then he dropped the bomb...
Read 13 tweets
Dec 17
2020: Instagram was social media's undisputed king.

Then TikTok pulled off the biggest social media heist in history -

STEALING 40M users EVERY MONTH.

Instagram's response? One of tech's most EPIC FAILS.

Here's the full story: 🧵 Image
It's early 2020, and Instagram is panicking.

The numbers are terrifying:

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But the scariest part? 62% were Gen Z.

Instagram's worst fear was about to come true...
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No one actually consumes content there anymore."

Instagram was watching an entire generation slip away.

And that's when they made their desperate move... Image
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Dec 16
In 2017, Uber was one of the world's most valuable startups at $69B.

Then they made ONE decision that triggered the biggest boycott in tech history...

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2016: Uber was unstoppable.

The company had expanded to 570+ cities worldwide.

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But beneath the surface, trouble was brewing...
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Sexual harassment claims being buried.

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Their STOCK CRASHED 35% in panic.

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Here's how Netflix's "dumbest decision" led to a $200B empire: 🧵 Image
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