Zombies Swarm Around Infected Hashtag in Clever Campaign for Walking Dead When undead followers attack
Whenever I write about zombies, I tend to bury the lead. That's a grave mistake. Anyway, here's a case study about how the Darewin Agency used social media to make The Walking Dead a hit on France's NT1 TV network. On its Walking Dead site, NT1 advised people to avoid a "zombie virus" by avoiding the #walkingdeadNT1 hashtag, which naturally prompted people to use it. Within moments of posting the hashtag on Twitter or Facebook, users were suddenly followed by hoards of virtual zombies. (Maybe those new followers were just average French people. Undead or Parisian … it can be tough to tell.) Contrast this campaign—in which 30,000 users were "attacked" by zombies in less than two weeks, with 550,000 impressions tallied—with this Walking Dead stunt from Toronto, where a finger was chopped off a pair of giant zombie hands each day until the series' return to TV. Effective for sure, but the French effort required more braaaains. Via Adverve.
- iCrossing CEO Don Scales Steps Down
- Buzzfeed's Michael Hastings Dead at 33
- What's So Good About 'Dumb Ways to Die'?
- MTV Study Shows Varying Attitudes Within Millennial Generation
- Google: We Have a Right to Publish Security Requests
- YouTube Stars Struggle Mightily Off YouTube
- Shazam Introduces Engagement Metric for TV Ads
- FCC Chairman Nominee Says Broadband Is Top Priority
- Maxipad Brand Goes for Blood in Brilliant Reply to Facebook Rant
- Conan O'Brien to Advertisers: You Disgust Me, but I Will Take Your Money
- Millennial Guys Are Turning to Makeup
- MTV Study Shows Varying Attitudes Within Millennial Generation
- Apple Finds Its Footing Again With Evocative Film About Third-Party iOS Apps
- Sean 'Diddy' Combs Pitches Revolt and Tells Advertisers How to Be Cool
- Shazam Introduces Engagement Metric for TV Ads
- Barbarian Group Wins Inaugural Innovation Lions Grand Prix for Its Cinder Coding Platform
AdFreak is your daily blog of the best and worst of creativity in advertising, media, marketing and design. Follow us as we celebrate (and skewer) the latest, greatest, quirkiest and freakiest commercials, promos, trailers, posters, billboards, logos and package designs around. Edited by Adweek's Tim Nudd. Updated every weekday, with a weekly recap on Saturdays.


Email
Print







