The Guardian (USA)

Who needs a $120,000 banana when you can get a $120,003.99 Popeyes sandwich?

- Gene Marks

One of the things any small business person should be doing to grow their businesses is to watch – and learn. This week’s marketing lesson comes from an American fast-food chain. Pencils ready?

It’s easy to get internatio­nal attention for your business. All you need to do is take a chicken sandwich that sells for $3.99 and add $120,000. Then tape it to a wall. Then – and here’s the biggest thing – announce that if anyone does spend $120,003.99 for the sandwich you will donate the proceeds to charity.

That’s what American restaurant chain Popeyes did this week. The company’s marketing geniuses observed the attention that Comedian – that ridiculous $120,000 banana-taped-to-thewall stunt pulled at Art Basel Miami – received and brilliantl­y leveraged the same exhibition’s media coverage by coming up with something just as ridiculous: the Sandwich.

It worked. Countless media outlets reported on Popeyes’ promotion, the stunt went viral and commentato­rs around the world debated the merits of the Sandwich v Comedian. “If this fast-food stunt seems gauche

and consumeris­t, that’s because it is,” wrote Eater’s Jenny Zhang. “What is art, as a multibilli­on-dollar industry, but a market that turns creative production­s into commoditie­s bought and traded by wealthy institutio­ns and individual­s? In that sense, the existence of Comedian and the Sandwich make perfect sense as objects of consumptio­n.”

This is not just fun and games. It’s big business. Popeyes might be a large national restaurant chain but it faces the same challenges of any small merchant or restaurate­ur: getting attention for its brand in a very competitiv­e environmen­t. So they took a viral news story, put a funny twist on it that involves their own product and then made it all about the common good (ie a charity). The media loves this stuff. And I’m sure Popeyes is loving all the free press. Are you paying attention, small business owners?

No, the sandwich hasn’t sold yet even though a Popeyes representa­tive told the New York Post that one fan has “shown interest”. It doesn’t matter. Marketing mission accomplish­ed, and lesson learned.

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