Marriage of Convenience: 7-Eleven, 'Simpsons'
Real-Life Chain Takes on Kwik-E-Mart Persona for Film Promo
By Kate MacArthur
Published: July 02, 2007
CHICAGO (AdAge.com) -- Can "The
Simpsons" make 7-Eleven cool?
After months of speculation, the
convenience chain has revealed details of its "most massive and complex"
monthlong promotion for the July 27 release of "The Simpsons Movie." Starting
today, the marketer will remodel overnight a dozen stores in the U.S. and Canada
into the Kwik-E-Marts of the cartoon family's fictional Springfield, USA
hometown.

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An artist's rendering of the
Kwik-E-Mart.
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Yeah, we get itIf it
sounds like a risky move to dress up 7-Eleven as the animated store that is
frequently held up, sells expired hot dogs and once displayed a senior citizen
in its freezer section, it is. But management is betting that by showing it gets
the joke made in nearly every episode in the past 20 years, "Simpsons" and
Kwik-E-Mart fans will become 7-Eleven fans much the way Subservient Chicken and
the King gave social currency to Burger King.
"When you're the industry
leader, others may want to stereotype or poke fun at you," Doug Foster,
7-Eleven's chief marketing officer, said in a statement. "We get the joke and
want to have a little fun with our customers and fans of 'The Simpsons.'"
Detail-orientedThe retail chain and FreshWorks, an Omnicom
Group virtual-agency network led by Tracy Locke, Dallas, created more than 1,000
customized in-store displays and signs to bring the cartoon world to life. With
the kind of detail reserved for Hollywood back lots, the transformation is
all-encompassing -- from exterior walls and signs to store fixtures and employee
uniforms and name tags. Even donation canisters and ATMs will be made over with
Krusty's Kids and First Bank of Springfield logos. Stores will be made over by 6
a.m. July 1 in the U.S. and July 3 in Canada.
Completing the
environment, nine life-size characters from the show will be placed in and out
of each store, including Homer, Marge, Lisa, Maggie, store owner Apu, Chief
Wiggum and Comic Book Guy. In addition, senior citizen Jasper will be hiding in
the bagged ice freezer, and Bart and Milhouse will hang out on each stores'
roof.

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KrustyO's frosted cereal, one of several products
that will go on sale to further blur reality and
fiction.
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Blurring the lineTo
further blur reality and fiction, the team also collaborated with private-label
manufacturers to create products from the show that will go on sale exclusively
in all 6,400 domestic stores. 7-Eleven partnered with the Malt-O-Meal Co. to
create the KrustyO's frosted cereal and Cott Corp. to create Buzz Cola. The
store's frozen Slurpee beverage will be reinvented as the Kwik-E-Mart Squishee.
The WooHoo! Blue Vanilla Squishees will come in 22-ounce paper cups with the
fictional logo. Another surprise is that Simpsons' creator Matt Groening's Bongo
Entertainment Group created a real comic book of Bart Simpson's favorite
superhero, Radioactive Man, for sale during the promotion. The 32-page comic,
numbered 711, will be wrapped in plastic and sell exclusively at the chain for
$3.99.
The company, of course, didn't rush into this lightly. It's been
two years in the making. And, acknowledging that not everyone in America is a
fan of the show or would get the joke, the team conducted extensive consumer
polling and discussions with employees and franchisees. On average, 93% of
respondents responded positively to the experience. Some ideas, though, were
killed in the process. Wannabe Homers won't find their beloved Duff Beer,
because it doesn't fit with the expected PG-13 rating for the film. Nor will the
store see Snake, one of Springfield's most-wanted criminals, despite the planned
extra security for each store.
And then there are those heat-lamp hot
dogs.
No bad dogsProduction company Gracie Films' 20th
Century Fox was "dead set" on naming the real wieners for their sitcom
counterpart, but the 7-Eleven team drew the line at having hairy, months-old hot
dogs associated with the brand. The "negative fresh-food connotation" would
negate the chain's "high standards of fresh foods," said Matt Rand, associate
creative director at Tracy Locke FreshWorks.
But other than that, "you
won't find anything out of character" from the movie, assured a 7-Eleven
spokeswoman. The team spent hours deciding what to include in the experience and
how to stay true to "The Simpsons'" gestalt.
"We did go through quite a
few copy lines in terms of being funny and not being too far over the edge,"
said Sandi Means, FreshWorks chief operating officer.

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The big pink
donut
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Springfield comes to
SeattleSet in Chicago; Dallas; Denver; Burbank, Calif.; Los Angeles; Las
Vegas; New York; Lake Buena Vista, Fla.; Seattle; Mountain View, Calif.;
Bladensburg, Md.; and Coquitlam, B.C., Canada (on July 3), the stores will
remain in drag through the July 27 movie premiere. The stores will switch back
to 7-Elevens at the end of the month.
"We've taken a global organization
and convinced them to change the name of their organization for a month," said
Ms. Means. "That in itself is entirely unique."
While the
reverse-product-placement concept of bringing to reality fictional products has
been around since Willy Wonka and Bubba Gump Shrimp, executives see the
promotion as a way to redefine the shopping experience at 7-Eleven, which has
been on a marketing tear under Mr. Foster. Of course, those other reverse
placements didn't involve a real-world store embracing a joke originally made at
its own expense.
And what of "The Simpsons" franchise?
"'The
Simpsons' franchise has made fun of itself in the past for being so
commercialized, which may actually make it an even better candidate for reverse
product placement," said David Edery, a research affiliate of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology's comparative-media-studies program, in an e-mail.
"After all, consumers might expect this sort of thing from the show." He and
other experts agree that the risks come down to execution.
Get
it?"It's pop culture commenting on pop culture commenting on itself,"
said Tim Stock, managing partner of Scenario DNA. He does see one risk, though:
"The question is getting the payoff on the joke," he said, "that it's
intelligent enough, smart enough, interesting enough where consumers go, 'Have I
entered into "The Simpsons" or have I entered into advertising hell?'"
"There's always the [hopefully small] possibility that initiatives like
this will backfire, but I think it's very likely that consumers will be thrilled
by the opportunity to experience products that they've enjoyed virtually for so
many years," said Mr. Edery. "You may not be curious to try a Slurpee, but a
Squishee [even if it's technically the same thing] may very well capture your
imagination. The big question is: When the promotion ends, will consumers come
back for more Slurpees? That depends, in part, on the quality of their initial
experience."

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Buzz Cola
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So what are
the chances that KrustyOs and Buzz Cola will become major sellers? Considering
the variety of "Simpsons" memorabilia on eBay, pretty good.
'Icing on
the cake'"It may well be that one or two of them survive into continuous
shelf placement, but that would probably be icing on the cake rather than a core
component of the promotion evaluation," said John Quelch, professor of marketing
at Harvard Business School. But if the products don't sell, "it would be a sad
commentary" he said on the promotion.
"We expect to sell out very
quickly," said Mr. Hayman. We have contingency plans to start up production
again if we have to."
As for the props not for sale, the marketer is
identifying local charities for each market to which they'll donate the props.
If they make it that far. What self-respecting Simpsons fan wouldn't
want their own Kwik-E-Mart uniform?
"I've already been offered $100 for
one," said FreshWorks' Ms. Means.