Press Releases Winners Excel Statues/Logos Purchase Awards

Silver
Creativity In PR
Challenger Brand

Click a thumbnail to change media.


Previous Entry Next Entry

Back to Results
Entrant: Colle McVoy, Minneapolis
Brand: Perdue
Title: "Chicken Feed. Human Snack."
Corporate Name of Client: Perdue
Client Company: Perdue, Salisbury, MD
Client Head of Brand Marketing: David Zucker
Media Company: Million Dollar Media, Woodbridge
Media Company President: Henry Ferry
PR Company: Edible, Los Angeles
PR Company Senior Vice President: Carrie Becker
Consultancy Company: Marriner, Minneapolis
Consultancy Company Account Supervisor: Katie Vacca
Agency: Colle McVoy, Minneapolis
Agency Chief Executive Officer: Christine Fruechte
Agency President: Jessica Henrichs
Chief Creative Officer: Ciro Sarmiento
Executive Creative Director: Dustin Black
Group Creative Director: Meghan Figueroa
Creative Directors: Zach DeBlaey/Chris Schults/David Hahn
Associate Creative Directors: Lauren Colasanti/Carl Martin
Agency Print Producer: Sandra Chute
Agency Head of Production: Eric Skaare
Agency Director of Integrated Production: Laurel Osman
Agency Senior Producer: Chelsey Wirth
Agency Producer: Grant Maxfield
Agency Creative Technologist: Charlie Hield
Agency Project Manager: Kennedy Bilse
Agency VP, Group Earned Creative & Media Relations Director, Exponent: Andrew Miller
Agency Strategy Director: Amanda Lane
Agency Account Supervisor: Kate DeNucci
Agency Group Account Director: Natalie Maiser
Agency Account Directors: Britanny Gerdin/Sara Robino
Design Company: 10 Thousand Design, Minneapolis
Design Director: Diana Quenomeon
Designer: Greta Hatzung
Packaging Company: The Packaging Lab, Brooklyn Park
Packaging Manufacturing Company CEO: Dan Niblo
Packaging Manufacturing Company Project Manager: Jenn Paredes
Packaging Company: MNFX, Minneapolis

Description:
Introducing Chix Mix. While Perdue’s biggest rival was feeding their chickens animal byproducts and antibiotics in nearly every meal, Perdue doubled-down on their clean, all-vegetarian chicken feed.

Made from 95% of what Perdue’s chickens actually eat, Chix Mix was corn, puffed wheat and edamame…plus a little BBQ seasoning just for the humans.

Most importantly it had no steroids, hormones, animal byproducts or antibiotics. Ever. So clean that people can eat it. Chix Mix was transparency in a snack, and on a small budget it took off, forcing Americans to ask themselves, “What’s in my food’s food?” We knew that busy working moms care about making a healthy choice when shopping for chicken, but they’re confused by the claim game. And when our biggest competitor claimed going back to using antibiotics was a positive, Perdue had to step in.

Perdue doubled-down on their all-vegetarian feed at a time when their biggest rival was outspending them 10:1. With an influencer and consumer strategy targeting busy working moms, Chix Mix made it into the hands of our audience with a simple message, asking Americans to question what’s in their food’s food.

It made America wake up and pay closer attention to the ingredients fed to the chicken they consume. Chix Mix was designed to be transparency you could eat, because unfortunately many Americans don’t ask themselves, “What’s in my food’s food?”

Embracing the natural, humorous tension between humble chicken feed and a poppy, fun snack food, Chix Mix was made to amuse with a snack-forward design and earnest, honest packaging copy.

Chix Mix was given away online and delivered to influencers in a kit containing a reusable wooden chicken crate and a simple prompt: “What’s in your chicken’s chicken feed?” Chix Mix was groundbreaking as an animal feed turned human snack, and it brought fresh attention to the importance of examining the full food chain.

After all, we are what we eat, right? Perdue sure thinks so. That’s why they created Chix Mix — to force those shopping for chicken to take a closer look, ask harder questions and insist on cleaner chicken feed. Chix Mix made big waves with 100% positive sentiment, and the “no antibiotics ever” messaging pulled through 100% of the work. It garnered 1 billion total earned media impressions through over 500 placements, including a CNN.com story that was syndicated in more than 30 other national outlets.

Posts promoting a Chix Mix giveaway surpassed goals by threefold, with supply selling out in under two minutes. But just as important as all the numbers, Chix Mix resulted in prompting Americans to insist that the ingredients fed to the chicken they buy are as clean and suitable as the plated chicken dinners they feed their children.