This examination focuses on none other than Post's Golden Crisp cereal mascot and marketing forefront: Sugar Bear. This human-like, cheery mascot may seem like he has fallen by the wayside as an advertising tool and ended up simply as an animation on the supermarket shelf, but alas! As you'll soon see, Sugar Bear is alive and well. Very well.
Source: postfoods.com |
It didn't take long for me to come across the Golden Crisp page on postfoods.com. The website features Sugar Bear, and provides links to Sugar Bear's fan page on Facebook. That's right, Facebook. You've come a long way since creating cheesy, jingle-laden commercials for your puffed wheat cereal, Post.
Source: postfoods.com |
Sugar Bear's Facebook, in a nutshell, is marketing genius. The page utilizes a "college-aged" theme that the cereal has adapted; Sugar Bear posts funny memes about eating cereal, and often uploads pictures of himself hilariously photoshopped into various pictures. Post is certainly capitalizing on the humor appeals of advertising!
The strategy coming from this "new-aged" Sugar Bear might be in an attempt to recapture the young audience once addicted to sugary, primarily child-marketed cereal. After all, I don't think that children ages 5-11 would be prone to checking out the latest meme Sugar Bear has uploaded to "his" Facebook fan page.
It's safe to say that Sugar Bear, with his Golden Crisp cereal, has been re-branded in a way that I, at least, didn't see coming. I have to say, I'm impressed. But if the bear's Facebook and web page haven't proved his marketing awesomeness:
Check out this awesome Sugar Bear video!
Pretty awesome, right? Go ahead, watch it again. You know you want to.
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