BizBash Chicago
BizBash Chicago
     ADVERTISE   |  FEEDBACK  |   SUBSCRIBE   |   ABOUT US  |  RSS   |  
GOOGLE TRANSLATE
  • English
  • català
  • Dansk
  • Deutsch
  • Español
  • suomi
  • Français
  • hrvatski
  • Indonesia
  • Italiano
  • latviešu
  • Nederlands
  • norsk
  • Polski
  • Português
  • Svenska
  • Filipino
COAST TO COAST   08.18.09 1:44 PM PRINT | SEND TO A FRIEND |
Construction Zones
To reintroduce its brand to consumers across the country, Lego launched a 23-city tour that will invite guests to build toy structures at state fairs, air shows, and a zoo.
On Saturday, while fighter jets swooped and dove over Lake Michigan during the Air and Water Show, some families took a break from the crowded lake shore to play with Legos at the Lincoln Park Zoo. Kicking off a 23-city tour known as the Lego Experience, which will wrap up on November 1 at the Wings Over Houston Air Show, the promotion aims to "either reacquaint, reintroduce, or introduce the brand to new consumers," said Vince Rubino, manager of marketing events at Lego Systems Inc., adding that the promotion's target audience is families with children between the ages of four and 12.

Rubino noted that the goal of the event is not to spread brand awareness, something he said the company already has. "Ninety-eight percent of people out there know Lego," he said. "So we're not looking for brand exposure. [With this promotion] we're looking to provide a brand experience." To achieve that, the tour employs a series of tents with different activities that "allow people to get the brand in their hands, start playing with the bricks, and realize 'Oh, I forgot how much fun Lego is,'" Rubino said.
CONTINUED >

PHOTO GALLERY

In each city, the activation will employ a branded box truck and a series of tents.  - Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
In each city, the activation will employ a branded box truck and a series of tents. 
Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
The box truck bears the name of the promotion.  - Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
The box truck bears the name of the promotion. 
Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
Tents house signage devoted to Lego fun facts. - Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
Tents house signage devoted to Lego fun facts.
Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc. 
Activities include a family building challenge, which lets groups compete in timed Lego construction. - Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc.
Activities include a family building challenge, which lets groups compete in timed Lego construction.
Photo: Courtesy of Lego Systems Inc.
   

In one tent, families are invited to compete against one another in timed Lego-construction challenges; another tent houses a table piled with loose Lego bricks, where individuals can build whatever comes to mind. "We have a pretty well-formulated plan of what we want the experience to be," Rubino said. "We fill a large table with loose bricks, and just ask people to come in and use their imaginations to build something. And that's entertainment galore. So we don't have to really work too hard and over-think this." 

Throughout the promotion, two teams of brand representatives—an East Coast and a West Coast team—will hit up state fairs, air shows, and other large festivals in cities such as San Diego, Minneapolis, and Phoenix. Although Rubino and his team placed calendar listings in various city newspapers and dedicated a Facebook page and a blog to the promotion, "We're not taking a very heavy advertising approach to this," he said. "We've found that when we do advertise heavily for [our] events, we get a lot of Lego enthusiasts coming. We're trying to introduce ourselves to newer or broader audiences, so what we've done instead is say we're going to go to largely attended, large-scale venues and rely on walk-by traffic." 

Rubino said that he and his team will look to attendance to measure the promotion's success. Brand reps are still crunching numbers from the weekend's event and won't determine average attendance until November. "We'll rely on the venues to tell us attendance [in each city]," he said, explaining that he and his team won't ask guests to sign in with their email addresses at each site because Committee On Political Action regulations prevent Lego and other toy companies from doing so. "We also have our team do a head count at the site every 15 minutes to half an hour, so we try to come up with a good ballpark," he said. Additionally, the company has a Lego Club, a free magazine subscription which consumers can subscribe to online. "That's another metric we can track—how many people sign up for the club—to measure the tour's success," Rubino said.

The tour marks the first time in six years that Lego is putting on a promotion of this kind, and Rubino said the reason for rolling the event out now lies in the company's current success. "We're in a pretty unique position right now in that our sales are phenomenal," he said. "We're one of the few—if not the only—toy companies that has seen double-digit consumer sales in a tight economy. So we look at this as the time not to rest on our laurels but to go out there and try to get more consumers. TV commercials are still king with kids, and we know that. But we also know the strength of doing these live events, and of people just getting the Lego bricks in their hands."

  —Jenny Berg
RELATED TOPICS Lego

MORE COAST TO COAST STORIES
Clinique and Teen Vogue Bring Young Women to Beauty Tour, Send Them Online
Absolut Launches "Anthem" Ad Campaign With Trumpets, Five-City Tour
Amstel Light Aims to Bring Amsterdam Experience to North America With Concert Series
Showtime's Nurse Jackie Stunt Targets Medical Professionals in Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York
Carnival Cruise Lines Woos Travelers With Virtual Aquariums in Six Cities


More Suppliers/Venues to Consider ADVERTISEMENT
Crystal Gardens at Navy Pier
The Crystal Gardens, operated by the Stefani Signature Restaurant Group, are a beautiful indoor, one-acre botanical garden. This six-story glass atrium with a 50-foot arched ceiling holds more than 80 live palm trees, lush foliage, hanging ‛twinkle lights,“ and dancing ‛leapfrog“ fountains. More >>

EMAIL THIS RESOURCE
Paulette Wolf Events & Entertainment
Paulette Wolf Events & Entertainment is a national firm renowned for its unique combination of creative design, event management, and entertainment production. For more than 35 years, PWEE has assisted corporations in reaching their objectives through extraordinary and complex events. More >>

EMAIL THIS RESOURCE
E-vents Registration
E-vents Registration offers comprehensive solutions for meeting planners and conference and trade show organizers. Services include an advanced, customizable, secure online registration system; robust e-vite systems; a call center; full event housing; Web development; HTML email marketing; and professionally staffed on-site registration services. More >>

EMAIL THIS RESOURCE
 
Search for Suppliers
Search for Venues
By Type

By Neighborhood/Location

Show Only New Venues
RECENTLY VIEWED










MOST POPULAR STORIES
1. Astronauts Greet, Galileo Tends Bar at Adler Planetarium's Celestial Ball
2. Chicago Chefs Prepare Apple-Cider Bubbles, Whipped Salt Cod for Food & Wine Entertaining Showcase
3. 8 New Venues for Chicago Holiday Parties
4. Fur Ball Offers Separate Amenities and Ticket Prices for Human and Canine Guests
5. Christian Louboutin Shoes Inspire Design Firm's Holiday Party
6. New Moon Premiere Beckons 10,000 People and 2 Live Wolves
7. Poll Results: Informal Nights Out Make Most Appropriate 2009 Holiday Parties
8. How Do You Make Staffers Feel Appreciated—at Little or No Cost?
9. Jacky's on Prairie: New Evanston Bistro
10. MoMA Gets Suitably Whimsical and Macabre for Tim Burton Tribute