The best marketing campaigns of 2020: Part 2
Marketing Week ReportersFrom Tesco to Starbucks to Leon, the Marketing Week team chooses the second set of eight campaigns that make up our best marketing of 2020.
From Tesco to Starbucks to Leon, the Marketing Week team chooses the second set of eight campaigns that make up our best marketing of 2020.
Despite a rise in LGBTQ+ representation in advertising, trans people are still woefully underrepresented.
Both brands admit they have learned the hard way that not involving in-house teams with pitch processes can create a “negative environment” internally.
The broadcaster tasked entrants to pitch campaigns that challenged stereotyping around the LGBT+ community, as well as highlighting the lack of representation in advertising.
The coffee giant is trying to bring its marketing and product development closer together so it can jump on trends faster and get better insight on what resonates.
From Asos’s wheelchair-friendly jumpsuit to Starbucks opening its first sign language store, brands are making moves to cater for people beyond the mainstream and unlock the potential of the ‘Purple Pound’.
The coffee shop chain admits it had become too focused on promotional activity, which was no longer profitable and meant its focus had become too short term.
The coffee giant said global sales rose 2% in its fourth quarter – this compared to 4% growth for the same period last year.
Starbucks’ CEO believes partnerships with pureplay digital companies are increasingly important, as online giants will struggle to “outmanoeuver” the brand.
The coffee brand believes providing a consumer experience that “evokes human emotion and connection” will determine which brick and mortar retailers thrive in the future.
The coffee chain hopes the launch of new cold coffee options will widen appeal and offer young people “a new way in” to the brand.
The coffee giant believes voice ordering will become the next big thing in retail.
Starbucks believes that its 25,000 stores across the globe has led consumers to “forget” about its “high-quality” coffee.
Starbucks is launching a “conversational ordering system” dubbed My Starbucks Barista that will be powered by artificial intelligence.
Starbucks is heavily pushing its Teavana iced teas range as part of a large-scale summer campaign, but will have to overcome sugar concerns and muted consumer interest around tea if it wants to succeed.