Promo - February 2008 - (Page 18) The Players Richard Te desco EXPERIENTIAL HEALTH QUENCHER Diet Coke backs heart disease education drive Diet Coke is carrying a banner to build women’s awareness about heart disease with a fashion event and a multicity tour, coinciding with American Heart Month in February. The brand is supporting the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute’s The Heart Truth campaign by sponsoring a Red Dress fashion show and a traveling exhibit that offers free heart health screenings, educational material and samplings of the diet soda. “This issue is very important to our consumer base,” says Caren Pasquale Seckler, group director, low calorie colas, Coca-Cola North America. “And it fits with our perspective on well-being.” Coca-Cola has long been a corporate advocate of healthy lifestyles. Its long-standing Olympics sponsorship is the most visible aspect of Coke’s profile as a fitness proponent. It has been particularly active internationally in recent years. Copa Coca Cola youth soccer leagues, started in Mexico in 1998, now supports student athletes in 10,000 schools throughout Latin America. In 2001, the Coca-Cola English Schools Cup introduced a championship competition among 2,600 schools and 40,000 students annually. Coke also sponsors a cycling program in Denmark, and athletic activities programs through other sports in Norway, Australia and the Philippines. But this marks the first time a Coke brand has engaged on this scale in a campaign of this kind, according to Seckler. The effort kicks off with The Heart Truth’s Red Dress Collection Fashion Show in New York on Feb. 1 during Mercedes Benz Fashion Week. That date is National Wear Red Day, aimed at raising the country’s collective consciousness about heart disease. The Red Dress Collection will feature dresses from top fashion designers and worn by celebrities on the runway to demonstrate their support for the campaign and the red dress concept. Six celebrityworn dresses will then become part of The Heart Truth Road Show that will hit 10 U.S. cities through April. The exhibit will stop at shopping malls in Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas, Charleston, SC, Birmingham, AL, Palm Beach, FL, Atlanta Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Minneapolis. Besides seeing the symbolic red dresses, visitors to the exhibit can have a free screening for heart disease risk and get advice in a cardiac consultation area. They can also take home Red Dress pins and drink Diet Coke for free. But the real objective isn’t to sample product, but to present the proactive message the campaign tries to impart, encouraging women to take an active role in preventing heart problems by consulting their physicians and educating themselves about personal risk factors. Apart from the potential of reaching a broad demographic, Diet Coke is embracing this issue because of this sobering statistic: heart disease ranks as the No. 1 cause of death among women in the U.S. “It’s important to help raise awareness of that,” says Seckler. The Heart Truth and Red Dress logos will adorn Diet Coke, Caffeine-Free Diet Coke and Diet Coke Plus packaging. Tips and information about heart health care will also appear on the estimated 2.5 billion new product packages hitting retail shelves through May 31. Diet Coke will also support the campaign with a national blitz of TV, print and online ads and a contribution to the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, NHLBI’s umbrella organization. Coca-Cola North America will participate with a month-long educational program among 5,000 associate companies, including on-site heart health screenings and educational luncheons. While men obviously will also be exposed to the Diet Coke messages geared towards women, the brand’s research shows that a larger percentage of men are concerned about the cardiac health of the women in their lives than those women themselves. The current alliance between the brand and the NHLBI is for one year, but Seckler says Diet Coke wants to make it a long-term deal, depending on the response it receives from consumers. l P W For more articles on experiential marketing, go to http://promomagazine.com/eventmarketing/ Newsletter Web RSS Webinar Conference Podcast 18 FebRuary 2008 / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / Promo http://promomagazine.com/eventmarketing/ http://www.promomagazine.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - February 2008 Promo - February 2008 Contents Editor's Note Reality TV Products Rebound - Soon? The Real World Young But Not Stupid Social Tease Health Quencher How Effective? Big Game in Big Easy Commentary Mailbox Marketing Q&A: Coke's Kruse Control Gift-Card Monte Room Service The Agency Center Resource Center Can't Beat Loyalty Index of Advertisers Promo - February 2008 Promo - February 2008 - Promo - February 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - February 2008 - Promo - February 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - February 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Promo - February 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Promo - February 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Promo - February 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - February 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - February 2008 - Reality TV Products (Page 8) Promo - February 2008 - Reality TV Products (Page 9) Promo - February 2008 - Rebound - Soon? (Page 10) Promo - February 2008 - Rebound - Soon? (Page 11) Promo - February 2008 - The Real World (Page 12) Promo - February 2008 - The Real World (Page 13) Promo - February 2008 - Young But Not Stupid (Page 14) Promo - February 2008 - Young But Not Stupid (Page 15) Promo - February 2008 - Social Tease (Page 16) Promo - February 2008 - Social Tease (Page 17) Promo - February 2008 - Health Quencher (Page 18) Promo - February 2008 - Health Quencher (Page 19) Promo - February 2008 - How Effective? (Page 20) Promo - February 2008 - How Effective? (Page 21) Promo - February 2008 - Big Game in Big Easy (Page 22) Promo - February 2008 - Big Game in Big Easy (Page 23) Promo - February 2008 - Big Game in Big Easy (Page 24) Promo - February 2008 - Commentary (Page 25) Promo - February 2008 - Commentary (Page 26) Promo - February 2008 - Commentary (Page 27) Promo - February 2008 - Mailbox Marketing (Page 28) Promo - February 2008 - Mailbox Marketing (Page 29) Promo - February 2008 - Mailbox Marketing (Page 30) Promo - February 2008 - Mailbox Marketing (Page 31) Promo - February 2008 - Q&A: Coke's Kruse Control (Page 32) Promo - February 2008 - Q&A: Coke's Kruse Control (Page 33) Promo - February 2008 - Gift-Card Monte (Page 34) Promo - February 2008 - Gift-Card Monte (Page 35) Promo - February 2008 - Gift-Card Monte (Page 36) Promo - February 2008 - Gift-Card Monte (Page 37) Promo - February 2008 - Room Service (Page 38) Promo - February 2008 - Room Service (Page 39) Promo - February 2008 - Room Service (Page 40) Promo - February 2008 - Room Service (Page 41) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 42) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 44) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 45) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 46) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 47) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 48) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 49) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 50) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 51) Promo - February 2008 - Resource Center (Page 52) Promo - February 2008 - Can't Beat Loyalty (Page 53) Promo - February 2008 - Can't Beat Loyalty (Page 54) Promo - February 2008 - Can't Beat Loyalty (Page 55) Promo - February 2008 - Can't Beat Loyalty (Page 56) Promo - February 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 57) Promo - February 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 58) Promo - February 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - February 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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