Gold
Use of Social Media & Influencers
Social Media Post
Entrant: | The Martin Agency, Richmond |
Brand: | Solo Stove |
Title: | "Snoop Goes Smokeless" |
Corporate Name of Client: | Solo Brands LLC. |
Client Company: | Solo Stove, Grapevine, Texas |
Client President: | Mike McGoohan |
Global Chief Marketing Officer: | Luana Bumachar |
Senior Client Brand Manager: | Chris Johnston |
PR Company: | Purple Orange , Jackson, Wyoming |
Agency: | The Martin Agency, Richmond |
Agency Chief Executive Officer: | Danny Robinson |
Chief Creative Officer: | Jerry Hoak |
Creative Director: | Mik Manulik |
Associate Creative Directors: | Allison Apperson/Chase Zreet |
Agency Head of Design: | Judd Burnett |
Agency Print Producer: | Jamie Dollins |
Agency Head of Production: | Brett Alexander |
Agency Senior Producer: | Jacob Munson |
Agency Producer: | Andy Singer |
Agency Social Media Director: | Matt DeSiena |
Agency Social Media Planner: | Alana Gleason |
Agency Project Manager: | Jenn Clark |
Agency Chief Strategy Officer: | Elizabeth Paul |
Agency Account Director: | Katie White |
Production Companies: | Even/Odd, San Francisco |
Director: | Chioke Nassor |
Executive Producer: | Justin Lomax |
Line Producer: | Kimberly Estrada |
Head of Production: | Taylor Feltner |
Post-Production Company: | SuperJoy, Richmond |
Executive Post-Producer: | Brian Fox |
Post-Producers: | Chris Frendo/Kathryne Jansen |
VFX Editor: | Lyly Nguyen |
Flame Artist: | Paul Wiederholt |
Edit Facility: | SuperJoy, Richmond |
Editors: | Brian Gregory/Will Rummell |
Assistant Editor: | Tony Schaffner |
Color Company: | Royal Muster, Culver City |
Colorists: | Nicole Di Sisto/Zack Wilpon/Esli Israel |
Recording Studio: | Overcoast, Richmond |
Sound Design Producer: | Andrew Carter |
Sound Mixer: | Jonathan Waller |
Description:
They developed products better suited for the backyard than the backcountry, but a shift of offerings doesn’t automatically equate to a shift in audience — so they needed a campaign to go beyond their outdoorsy core.
Their budget couldn’t buy the level of awareness they needed, so we set out to use earned media and social strategy to make the brand a household name.
The primary benefit is Solo Stove’s no-smoke ambiance, so we looked for someone known for just the opposite. An unlikely mouthpiece who happened to reach a cross-section of culture: Snoop Dogg.
Snoop was more than talent, we leveraged his incredible instincts as an entertainer and empowered him to have fun with the stunt.
That collaboration unlocked cultural impact far beyond the collaborations with the 40+ brands he’s represented in the past. The difference was an invitation to leverage his persona in a way that felt organic, genuine and real. And because we kept the product out of the initial post, we were able to lay the groundwork for buzz in a way that kept everyone (including celebrities, media personas and economists) engaged in the campaign’s development.
The brief was to raise awareness and make Solo Stove a household name, which we accomplished in a mere 13 days.
Solo Stove confidently bought into our vision of a socially led stunt designed to earn media via public relations, followed quickly by traditional media (TV, radio, OOH and performance digital).
The integrated campaign was born from Solo Stove’s brand strategy; the insight that steered the creative concept was that while some people feel right at home in the great outdoors, others require a familiar comfort to fully relax.
The strategy and tagline “We fixed fire” shed light on the company’s transformation of the earliest human invention: fire. Solo Stove took the smoke out of their pits and made fire into an experience you actually could enjoy, welcoming a broader audience to an outdoor experience the brand was uniquely suited to deliver.
The creative platform centered around “going smokeless” aimed to raise awareness of brand and primary product benefit. We intentionally cast Snoop Dogg for his international, multigenerational pop-culture iconicity and synchronicity with “smoke.”
Outside of his music career, his endeavors seep into the cannabis industry, from investments to digital media to legal sale of the product itself.
Snoop wasn’t just selling an LTO stove; he was selling a lifestyle, one bolstered by his universal appeal. Snoop broadened the perception of who the outdoors is “for” in our multimedia campaign that lit up social and then spread like wildfire across mass media.
Without a paid media budget to launch, we needed to generate widespread awareness for Solo Stove, its marquee product and key differentiator, by hacking this modern news model with an attention-grabbing, two-part strategy centered around an authentic and contextual celebrity partnership and well-coordinated rollout.
The Announcement: We kicked off our external communications plan with a salacious and unexpected announcement via social from our official “smokesman,” Snoop Dogg.
The announcement was deliberately vague and free of brand marks or mentions in order to feed consumers’ voracious interest in celebrity news, entertainment and the social-fueled cultural conversation du jour. To let this intrigue and dialogue build, we allowed the announcement to live unaddressed for four days, while executing targeted embargoed outreach to tip off our stunt to top-tier publications.
The Reveal: Four days later, we dropped the brand film in the place culture had been obsessed with following: Snoop’s social feed. A second round of trending conversation ensued as the influencers, outlets and pop-culture obsessives who had been speculating about why Snoop “gave up smoke” circled back to their audiences to explain what was really going on.
“Snoop goes smokeless” broke the internet not once, but twice.
The initial announcement made “breaking news” across the globe, earning 5,629 unique earned media placements across 68 countries; with even fellow celebrities publicly speculating about the ominous tweet. When the launch video dropped four days later, those media outlets followed up, garnering another 4,317 hits as brands and individuals alike meme-ified the announcement post in comedic solidarity.
Weed stocks plummeted while Snoop Dogg and Solo Stove’s social followings soared: increased by 1 million followers for Snoop and 60,000 for the brand.
On Instagram, the launch video garnered 52.3M views (+6,179% above Snoop’s average of 846.4K views). On X, the video garnered 61.7M views (+3,147% above Snoop’s average of 1.9M views). And on TikTok, the video garnered 53M views (+4,582% above Snoop’s average of 1.1M views). Solo Stove bolstered Snoop’s average engagement rate by 7,527% and Solo Stove’s campaign-specific social posts received 49,775% more engagement than average.
In totality, the campaign garnered 31 million engagements, 19.5 billion impressions and $100 million in earned media value, far beyond what the brand could have afforded to spend. But it wasn’t just wildly successful in building awareness for the brand, it moved the entire funnel.
Solo Stove saw a 500% increase in organic search, a 70% increase in revenue, a 20% increase in average order value, and a 22% drop in customer acquisition costs.