by Freddy J. Nager, Founder of Atomic Tango LLC & Japanese Food Lover
So you manage a small chain of sushi restaurants, and business is not exactly stellar, so you decide to run one of those coupons that winds up in people’s mailboxes en route to the recycling bin. And that’s when this happens…
When I first saw the coupon, I noticed the right part first (red type catches the eye much better than reverse type on a blue background). Then I noticed the people, since the eye tends to gravitate to human faces, and I thought, “Oh, look, white sushi chefs in L.A. That’s different.” Then I noticed the logo for “Worst Cooks in America.” Then I knew, “This must be blogged.”
The contest is run not by Sushi Mac but by Valpak Direct Marketing Systems, Inc., the company that puts together these coupon packs that wind up in people’s mailboxes en route to the recycling bin. Usually, there’s only one business advertised per coupon — I’ve never seen two. So I wonder what Valpak told the folks at Sushi Mac… “Hey, we’ll give you a discount if you let us run a contest for the Food Network on your coupon.” I can only guess that they did not tell them that “Worst Cooks in America” would be located just inches away from “Unique Dining Experience!”
My appetite for sushi was quite diminished. The offers on the reverse side — which included “All Sushi $3.00 (Tax Included!) Per Order” — did not provide any culinary reassurance, since most consumers associate low prices with low quality. Not exactly what I want with raw fish.
In addition to poor ad placement and questionable pricing strategy, having a sushi chain sound like an Apple computer doesn’t help much, either: “Get the New Sushi Mac — Raw Power for Those on a Roll! Now Comes with iTunas.”
Recycling bin here it comes.
Absolutely bad ad placement and pricing strategy.
“Get the New Sushi Mac — Raw Power for Those on a Roll! Now Comes with iTunas” …at Sushirama!
Actually, Sushi mac is both cheap and delicious. I don’t think they chose the ad to be there.
Freddy’s Comment: No, of course they didn’t. The coupon company was the one who perpetrated this poor ad placement.