Social media is coming to vending machines, courtesy of PepsiCo, which unveiled a new touch-screen interactive social vending machine at the National Automatic Merchandising Association conference in Chicago. According to InformationWeek, the machine -- developed for PepsiCo by DCI Marketing and Protagonist -- allows individuals to buy drinks as gifts for friends, who receive redeemable codes via text message. The person buying the gift just has to enter the intended recipient's name and mobile number, along with a personal message - plus a brief video message, if they wish. The recipient can redeem the code whenever the mood strikes.
IW reports that PepsiCo is protecting privacy by not storing email addresses and phone numbers submitted to the machines, which have yet to be market-tested with beverage brands (the first tests are due later this year). Users can also buy drinks for strangers in what Pepsi terms "Random Acts of Refreshment," with the gift delivered according to certain criteria -- for example, sending a beverage to someone in a city experiencing a heat wave.
The social vending machines are PepsiCo's attempt to grapple with one of the main issues of social media marketing: making sure social media actually helps you sell stuff. It comes on the heels of mixed success for the Pepsi Refresh Project, the brand's first major venture into social media territory last year.
Pepsi Refresh was a big success in its stated goals of raising Pepsi's brand awareness and burnishing the brand's image, by giving away millions of dollars of grants to charitable initiatives large and small, with individuals and organizations submitting ideas online, and winners chosen by online voting. Altogether Pepsi allotted $20 million to fund grants in the project's first year, working out to about $1.3 million in grants per month. The online metrics were impressive: Pepsi told the Wall Street Journal that the Pepsi Refresh Project received more than 150,000 idea submissions in 2010, tallying 76 million votes from 17 million unique visitors over the same period.
But the total volume of Pepsi sales slipped 8.6% in the first nine months of 2010 compared to the same period in 2009, according to figures from trade pub Beverage Digest cited by WSJ. In other words, social media success appeared to have little relation (in the short term, at least) with increased sales.
COMMENTARY: I knew that competition between soft drink giants Coca Cola and Pepsi is fierce, and Pepsi's sales took a dip, but this is a crazy idea for getting people to drink more Pepsi. I think it is a stretch to call it a social fending machine. It's a Pepsi vending machine alright, but one that allows customers to redeems electronic gift coupons. Don't get me wrong, its a cool idea, and opens up the potential for social candy machines, social prophylatic machines, social detergent machines, social stamp dispensing machines. The list is endless, so long as it can be sold through a vending machine. I can hardly wait to see how well this new concept works. If it works, Coke will be next. The kids might just be crazy to go for this crazy idea. Facebook stands to make a bunch of money since payment will most likely be made with Facebook Credits.
Courtesy of an article dated April 29, 2011 appearing in MediaPost Publications The Social Graf
Well, this is quite interesting indeed. Would love to read a little more of this. Excellent post. Thanks for the heads-up.
Posted by: Saeco | 02/14/2013 at 03:00 AM
Nice to hear.. Now we will be able to interact with our friends while purchasing Pepsi..
Posted by: vending machines | 05/09/2011 at 11:11 PM