Pizza Hut is asking Super Bowl fans to submit videos using the words: "Hut. Hut. Hut."(Photo: Pizza Hut)
Regular folks eager to be a part of Super Bowl stardom are about to get the chance.
Pizza
Hut on Monday will announce plans for a contest whose winners - of
which there could be five to 10 - will star in a commercial that will
run just minutes before the Super Bowl kickoff.
The pizza giant is
asking football fans to submit very short videos of their best,
silliest or most creative recitation of the words every quarterback
shouts - and which Pizza Hut says is the heart of its name: "Hut. Hut.
Hut." In other words, simulate the start of a football play, but with
creative zeal.
"For decades, quarterbacks have been calling our
name to start every play," says Kurt Kane, chief marketing officer at
Pizza Hut.
For
Pizza Hut, it's all about generating serious social-media engagement
during one of its busiest days of the year. For consumers, it's a
cultural fantasy come true that is no longer limited to gridiron stars
or Hollywood celebrities.
The evolution of Super Bowl spots - from
corporate ego-massaging to consumer ego-stroking - took its biggest
turn in late 2006, when Doritos began promoting its now-annual "Crash
the Super Bowl" campaign before 2007's Big Game. Consumers submit
homemade ads to Frito-Lay, and the winners get aired during the game
with the lure of million-dollar cash prizes and other perks for winning
USA TODAY's Ad Meter competition. Others have followed that lead of
hands-on consumer participation - most recently Pizza Hut.
"Our culture has become increasingly obsessed with ourselves," says Martin Lindstrom, brand guru and author of Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy. "We're all turning into brands."
Pizza
Hut clearly gets that. But what it may be missing is the real
social-media connection, says social-media consultant Janet Fouts. "Why
is it so hard for brands to understand that taking advantage of their
fans' desire to be a star is not social?" poses Fouts. "This is really
just another advertising ploy to take advantage of people's egos."
Pizza Hut says otherwise.
"Consumers
love to be involved with the expansion of social media," Kane says.
"Smartphones and hand-held cameras have made it easier to video
yourself. Everyone has become a hip-pocket creative."
Clips,
which must be no longer than 15 seconds, should have some sort of
football theme with the word "hut" spoken at least once, twice or
several times. Complete rules are at www.Facebook.com/PizzaHut. Pizza Hut also is encouraging fans to promote their videos on Twitter. Deadline for submissions: Jan. 20.
"The Super Bowl is all about being at the center of attention," Kane says. "Why shouldn't fans be part of it?"
USA Today