In an attempt to 'celebrate' International Women's Day, Burger King led with these five words. Controversial clickbait. No additional context or explanation. A quick review of the Twitter feed immediately reveals the inevitable backlash from women and the unspeakably misogynistic taunts from men.
A representative female reply: "I get that you were using this comment as bait for a larger conversation to actually empower women. But listen to all the women telling you that using a sexist comment as bait isn’t cool. This was the first tweet I saw on international woman’s day."
One of the countless misogynistic comments: "But it worked. And they're right. Women do belong in the kitchen. Preferably barefoot and pregnant. Hahaha hahaha!!"
Did the Burger King marketing team really not anticipate this sort of reaction? Or, even worse, did they?!?
Ultimately, the restaurant chain had good intentions: to set the stage for unveiling the new Burger King H.E.R.Scholarship (Helping Equalize Restaurants). This program aims to help women advance in the culinary world. In a subsequent tweet, Burger King announced the program and explained it in detail.
Great initiative. Not great marketing. The immediate and massive negative reaction makes that very clear. But that didn't stop Burger King. In response to the criticism, the company stubbornly tweeted, "Why would we delete a tweet that's drawing attention to a huge lack of female representation in our industry?"
Because you enraged your target audience with a highly offensive stereotype that should never again see the light of day. That's why.
Given the ever-increasing amount of content being created every second -- combined with our ever-shrinking attention spans -- clickbait marketing is here to stay. But that doesn't give marketers the right to be offensive. There is a difference. There is a line in the sand, and we think Burger King crossed it with this unnecessary ploy. There are a million ways their marketing team could have gone with the announcement of this worthwhile scholarship program. It's a shame they chose this one.
One woman summed up the mistake of this PR stunt as follows: "The engagement on your original tweet -- which is literally just a sexist trope -- is 527% *higher* than the tweet announcing the scholarship program. Way more people are seeing you validate sexism on #InternationWomensDay than are learning about your scholarship program." We couldn't have said it better.
These are my thoughts on how companies can create stronger marketing to connect more strongly with their target audiences. I would love to hear yours.
Thanks for reading.
p.s. If you'd like to connect more strongly with your target audience, I'd love to help. Please message me at Todd@LINKTrainingAndConsulting.com, or call me at (513) 240-8383.
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March 9th update:
Burger King removed the original tweet and issued an
apology.