Most marketers who want to generate buzz, especially for a one-time event like a movie premiere, are looking to get the most eyeballs as fast as possible. But Amazon’s mega-delivery stunt for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom played a longer game—one that’s still going—and took engagement to a level rarely (if ever) seen with PR-drumming activations.
It began with the box. An Amazon box, specifically the largest in the company’s history. Delivered to Los Angeles (ostensibly from the dino-populated Isla Nublar) on May 29, it was trucked around the city on a flatbed, drawing attention and social media posts wherever it went.
Most buzz strategies would end there, perhaps slapping a hashtag somewhere in plain sight. Amazon’s box, with a Jurassic World logo, giant air holes and a reported 16,000-pound payload, instead featured a shipping label addressed to the protagonists of Fallen Kingdom, a SmileCode (which you scan with your Amazon mobile app) and the ultimate 2018 call to action: “Alexa, ask Jurassic World what’s in the box?”
Scanning the code took you to a microsite with a video and discount on Jurassic Park movies. The Alexa skill, however, took you to an interactive story that begins with the box and quickly transports you on a quest of investigative journalism to the shores of Isla Nublar. But even that was just a teaser for a deeper narrative experience that will go live later this month via the Jurassic World Revealed skill.
The project was more than a year in the making and required a wide range of moving parts and complementary partnerships, all leading up to the reveal of a T-rex statue at shopping destination The Grove L.A., with Fallen Kingdom stars Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard on hand to oversee the unboxing.
To learn more about how the project came together, Adweek caught up with Amazon U.S. ad sales chief Jeremi Gorman, who shared some of the big-picture goals and backstory on the company’s biggest delivery to date:
Adweek: How did this project first come about?
Jeremi Gorman, head of U.S. advertising sales, Amazon: Universal has a great history of collaborating with Amazon Advertising on big ideas, from a custom Amazon homepage for The Lorax and Read Across America, to the first-ever, fully third-party branded Amazon boxes for Minions (2015), and now teaming up for the biggest “delivery” in Amazon’s history.
This idea was actually hatched about a year ago in a brainstorm with Universal’s theatrical, franchise management, brand development and home entertainment teams and Amazon’s advertising sales, creative services, and marketing teams. Our goal was to build a program that would surprise and delight customers, create buzz for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, and immerse fans in some new and unexpected dinosaur adventures.
We wanted to capture the excitement our customers say they feel when an Amazon box is delivered, but make it bigger – so we decided to do just that: literally make it bigger … way bigger. Once we’d landed on Amazon’s largest “delivery” as the linchpin, we worked on extending the ways in which customers could interact with the strong Jurassic World brand—like physical engagement with the SmileCode, the FireTV trailer drop, and featured deals across the Jurassic video catalog and merchandise on Amazon. And stay tuned, there are a few more to come!
Who were the brands and agencies involved, and how did everyone stay on the same page as this idea was developed?
Amazon production spearheaded communication between a great group of cohorts who were involved in this project. Among those were Tool of North America, who helped produce the teaser video and the citywide driving stunt, and Red Rock Entertainment, who ensured the day-of talent theatrics ran smoothly. Universal also introduced their partnership with Jeep to provide proper Jurassic-branded escorts – its iconic Jeep Wrangler–as the box was driving around town.
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