Chattanooga Times Free Press

MoonPie created a virtual quarantine companion

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

During a time of social isolation, an iconic Chattanoog­a snack brand is providing companions­hip to those stuck at home, at least in the virtual world.

The MoonPie MoonMate offered through Amazon’s Alexa provides answers and conversati­on, not unlike what a real life roommate might provide, in the latest social media marketing ploy by the owners of the 103-year-old MoonPie brand. The Chattanoog­a Bakery Co., which has been making the round marshmallo­w treats “as big as the moon” since 1917, teamed up with the Knoxville-based Tombras advertisin­g agency to launch the “Outta This World” virtual roommate last week.

“We know how hard being stuck inside and distant from loved ones has been for everyone,” said Tory Johnston, vice president of sales and marketing for MoonPie. “Our goal for MoonMate was to create conversati­ons with a sense of empathy and understand­ing, all while staying true to the brand.”

Chattanoog­a Bakery, owned by the fifth generation of the Campbell family, makes more than 1 million MoonPies a day at its bakery on Moccasin Bend in Chattanoog­a. MoonPies are available in three sizes and six flavors (chocolate, vanilla, banana, salted caramel, strawberry and the new mint chocolate).

While the snack cake has lasted for more than a

“We know how hard being stuck inside and distant from loved ones has been for everyone. Our goal for MoonMate was to create conversati­ons with a sense of empathy and understand­ing, all while staying true to the brand.”

— Tory Johns Ton, VP of sales and Marketing for Moon Pie

century, the brand has turned to social media in recent years to help attract younger consumers.

Dooley Tombras, president of Tombras, said the MoonMate was developed in an attempt to make it easier to stay in quarantine just a little while longer and offer an alternativ­e to other advertisem­ents airing during the coronaviru­s pandemic which have offered mainly somber music and words.

The inspiratio­n for using an Alexa-enabled voice for the brand came from a Mayo Clinic report on body of research showing laughter helps boost immunity and improve mental health. So while a MoonPie offers consumers an old fashion Southern treat to eat, the MoonMate provides a more contempora­ry, if a bit whimsical, voice for the snack brand.

“MoonPie has always been a bit of a jester and voice of levity, so the brand’s purpose was a natural starting point helping people through distancing, isolation and quarantine,” said Jeff Benjamin, chief creative officer at Tombras.

MoonMate is programmed to carry on a conversati­on for days answering thousands of questions and its developers said it often offers the same snarky, but lovable comments of what a real roommate might provide, including offers to:

› Pay rent (in the form of MoonPies)

› Avoid doing chores and other at-home activities

› Give you way too much informatio­n about its life

› Try as hard as it can to keep you inside

› Offer prompted and unprompted MoonPie facts, history, recipes, and more

› Compliment your wardrobe so much you’ll wonder if it’s going to steal your clothes

› Ponder space and other celestial marvels

The MoonMate builds on the brand’s voice which

Tombras helped develop over the past three years through its active Twitter accounts, which Forbes magazine touted as “the unexpected social media brand” of the year.

The Chattanoog­a Bakery Co. gained global recognitio­n when one of its tweets got more than 1.1 billion views by its simple two word response — “Lol ok” — to its rival Hostess when the bigger snack cake giant declared on Twitter that its golden cupcakes the official snack of the solar eclipse in August 2017.

MoonPie held its own eclipse parties to mark the moon blocking out the sun, helping to boost online sales for Chattanoog­a Bakery in one two-week period to as much as what the company had done in an entire year previously.

The Twitter and Alexa voices for MoonPie are an attempt to keep the century-old, traditiona­l brand current and a bit edgy for younger consumers to build another generation of fans for the marshmallo­w-filled treat.

“Three years ago we took a 100-year-old CPG snack cake and personifie­d it on Twitter,” Tombras said. “And now we’re taking that distinct brand voice from that two-dimensiona­l world and bringing it to a multi-dimensiona­l audio experience and another level of brand engagement. In typical MoonPie fashion, it’s totally bizarre and home grown, but it’s a great example of nascent technology getting integrated with everyday life to solve a problem.”

Benjamin sees the MoonPie MoonMate not just as a technologi­cal leap for brand interactio­ns, but a new frontier for how brands will behave online.

“COVID-19 has been a time machine for culture — letting it catch up to where technology got to first,” he said. “MoonMate hints at the future of conversati­onal content and commerce where a brand’s AI and voice are its soul.”

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 ?? PHOTO BY MEGHAN BROWN ?? Tory Johnston is vice president of sales and marketing at Chattanoog­a Bakery, Inc., the makers of MoonPie.
PHOTO BY MEGHAN BROWN Tory Johnston is vice president of sales and marketing at Chattanoog­a Bakery, Inc., the makers of MoonPie.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? Dooley Tombras is president of Tombras.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO Dooley Tombras is president of Tombras.

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