Grandparents, co-workers, children, students, friends, and families all join in on the Starbucks holiday experience with the simple purchase of a Starbucks beverage in the famed red cup. Although a simple change in packaging, this tribute to the holiday season brings customers from far and wide to get the first picture with their Starbucks red cups. Some even suggest that the cup is the start of their holiday season. Starbucks has truly differentiated itself by positioning themselves as a part of the holiday season rather than “just a coffee.” More distinctly, Starbucks has done an incredible job of leveraging the offline success of the red cups through a well planned online campaign based on the red cups and the experiences associated with them through the holidays.
For instance, Starbucks created numerous websites devoted distinctly to the red cups, such as itsredagain.com in 2006, distinctly for the purpose of building hype before the launch of the cups on Nov.1. Additionally, this year in the UK Starbucks launched “The Red Cup Challenge” encouraging participants to “earn points for their city through daily challenges including word searches and trivia, creative challenges including a town post card, and sharing on Facebook and
Twitter[1].” As well, this year Starbucks truly took consumer behavior into consideration with their red cup car guerrilla marketingcampaign. By sticking red cups to the tops of cars with magnets and randomly allowing them to roam the city streets, when a kind citizen would stop the car to remind the driver of their coffee mind-slip, the driver would award the individual with a $5 gift card. Starbucks then leveraged this offline campaign into an online marketing strategy through YouTube videos, Twitter, and Facebook content.
Year after year Starbucks builds on their holiday campaign by launching more YouTube videos, contests, Twitter contests, and most recently the holiday cup app launched last year devoted to animating the holiday cup experience. A true pioneer in building the online and offline bridge, Starbucks is well versed in bringing the magic of marketing to an object as simple as a red cup.
[1] http://www.blastradius.com/2012/10/19/starbucks-red-cups/