Houston Chronicle

The IHOb name change was just a prank to promote IHOP’s burgers.

After viral marketing campaign, IHOP and its fare here to stay

- By Miranda Moore

Pancake chain IHOP has confirmed that the company faked its recent name change to IHOb as a publicity stunt to promote its burgers. It wants to be called IHOP again. The return to its true name comes as the pancake chain celebrates its 60th birthday.

“That’s right, IHOP! We’d never turn our back on pancakes (except for that time we faked it to promote our new burgers),” the company tweeted this week.

Last month the pancake chain seemingly rebranded itself as the company introduced a line of black angus burgers, though it has had burgers on the menu for some time.

The initial announceme­nt drew a combinatio­n of criticism, confusion and ridicule on Twitter. One Twitter user commented, “Internatio­nal House of Betrayal.”

Even competitor­s piled on their commentary. When Wendy’s was asked its opinion on Twitter, the burger chain responded, “Not really afraid of the burgers from a place that decided pancakes were too hard.”

The buzz generated by IHOP’s name change campaign started during the week-long lead-up to the reveal of what the ‘B’ stood for. People guessed everything from bitcoin to Beyoncé. The buzz continued through the burger promotion, until this week’s un-branding. Whether that buzz translates to profits has yet to be seen.

Company spokeswoma­n Stephanie Peterson said in an email that the company was happy about the attention generated by the campaign. “(W)e’re incredibly proud of the IHOb campaign ... it did exactly what it was intended to do, which was to get people talking about, and thinking differentl­y about, IHOP.”

According to survey data from the YouGov Brand Index, the number of adults in the U.S. who said they talked about IHOP with family or friends, as well as the number who remembered seeing an advertisem­ent for IHOP, jumped the week after the name change announceme­nt. That viewership doesn’t necessaril­y translate into sales, as the Brand Index said the number of people considerin­g a purchase remained flat following the campaign.

Plenty of people on Twitter expressed doubt early on that the name change was real, and CNN reported a suspicious lack of a paper trail that would indicate an official name change. The company also confirmed to the Associated Press after the name change announceme­nt that it was a “tongue-in-cheek” promotion for their summer burger menu, and the company’s press release announcing the name change said the change would be “for the time being.”

IHOP isn’t the first company to pull a fake-out stunt to garner attention. But the fake ad in question usually consists of a one-off video or promotion.

Not in recent memory has a company committed to a prank rebranding that lasted an entire month.

 ?? Alan Diaz / Associated Press ?? On Twitter, IHOP said, “We’d never turn our back on pancakes (except for that time we faked it to promote our new burgers).”
Alan Diaz / Associated Press On Twitter, IHOP said, “We’d never turn our back on pancakes (except for that time we faked it to promote our new burgers).”

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