Samsung's #Galaxy11 viral ad fumbles when Franz Beckenbauer tweets from iPhone

Posted:
in iPhone edited January 2014
A global ad campaign to promote Samsung devices, involving soccer stars and an alien invasion story, instead revealed that the fantasy campaign's star manager Franz Beckenbauer tweets from his iPhone, not a Galaxy device.

Extravagant Samsung ad


Just over a month ago, Samsung launched its secretive ad campaign by seating actors in black robes at Chelsea FC, Bayern Munich and Juventus FC soccer games (that's "football" outside the U.S.). The company also financed billboards with secretive symbols and the hashtag "WinnerTakesEarth."

Samsung then recruited internationally famous soccer legend Franz Beckenbauer to serve as the manager of the company's "Galaxy 11" fantasy team, along with captain Lionel Messi, a Argentine footballer. Samsung has previously sponsored soccer teams in Europe, South America, Asia and Africa.

The company announced in November that it would be revealing "the story of Galaxy 11," involving a soccer players taking on invading aliens, as a "series of chapters over the coming months and brought to life across Samsung's GALAXY devices, online platforms and social media channels."

Younghee Lee, Samsung Mobile's executive vice president of Global Marketing stated, "through this one-of-a-kind campaign, Samsung wants to combine fans' universal love for football and GALAXY devices. We hope that this campaign stimulates our fans' imagination and inspire engagement."



However, the campaign hit a snag when Beckenbauer, the legendary leader of its fantasy team, tweeted out the next segment of the story from his iPhone. Once noticed, metadata tag was removed.

Samsung tweets from iPhone

This all happened before

Sending promotional tweets about other products from Apple's iOS devices seems to be quite popular. In October, T-Mobile chief executive John Legere intended to use Twitter to direct attention to Samsung Mobile's latest Note 3 phablet, but inadvertently did so via his new iPhone 5s.

He then sent out a photo claiming to carry both an iPhone and a phablet and the Gear watch.

His photo (below) showed the Samsung phablet on its lock screen, plugged in to a power adapter, with a generic carrier background wallpaper image. His iPhone was logged in and appeared in active use, with pending phone, email and Facebook notifications. It also had multiple pages of apps installed and a personalized background photo.

If you see me these are the devices I am using #today and I am on twitter on a different one :) pic.twitter.com/IgiK77XI6P

-- John Legere (@JohnLegere)


Last year, Oprah Winfrey used an iPad to send out tweets endorsing Microsoft's Surface, using the hashtag "#FavoriteThings" to say she had bought a dozen of them for Christmas gifts.

After BlackBerry paid Alicia Keys to serve as its Creative Director, she sent a personal tweet from her iPhone in February, then removed it and claimed her account had been "hacked."

In March, after the Chinese government's CCTV propaganda channel began airing reports stating that Apple was "biased against Chinese consumers in its warranty and customer service policies," a series of orchestrated tweets on China's Sina Weibo from various celebrities and other well known personalities voiced unison disapproval of Apple on cue after the broadcast, many of which were sent from iPad and iPhones.



Shortly afterward in April, Spanish tennis player David Ferrer tweeted his satisfaction with his #GalaxyS4 and that he was "configuring S Health on my new #GalaxyS4 to help with training @SamsungMobile," all via Twitter from his que contento estoy con mi iPhone.
«13

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 54
    moxommoxom Posts: 326member
    Hehe...
  • Reply 2 of 54
    Can we blame the user-agent string this time? ;)
  • Reply 3 of 54
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member

    "I'm on Twitter on a different one" was one of the slimiest attempted coverups I've ever seen. Look, you got caught.

     

    Samsung are a joke. I'm Twitting from my iPhone for free. Look Ma, no wires!

  • Reply 4 of 54
    philboogiephilboogie Posts: 7,675member
    Looks like the only way to send out a tweet these days is to use an iPhone. Oh well.
  • Reply 5 of 54
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,092member

    but..but..but... my phone was hacked!!!

  • Reply 6 of 54

    The whole campaign sounds very ... odd. Innovation?

  • Reply 7 of 54

    Samsung couldn't even come up with an original World Cup ad campaign. It's a total rip-off of Nike's famous spot from the mid-90s.

     

    No one can touch King Eric!

     

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdhvp-iYR3s

  • Reply 8 of 54
    Do promotional giveaways count as "sold" when Samsung releases its sales figures?
  • Reply 9 of 54
    payecopayeco Posts: 580member
    Quote:


     Just over a month ago, Samsung launched its secretive ad campaign by seating actors in black robes at Chelsea FC, Bayern Munich and Juventus FC soccer games (that's "football" outside the U.S.).


     

     

    And Australia. They also call it soccer. Aussie Rules Football (or just "football" or "footie" in Australia) is different from both American Football and soccer.

  • Reply 10 of 54
    sockrolidsockrolid Posts: 2,789member
    Monday Night Futbol Americano FTW.
  • Reply 11 of 54
    We know iPhones are popular... even Samsung pitchmen use them!
  • Reply 12 of 54
    gtrgtr Posts: 3,231member
    payeco wrote: »
    And Australia. They also call it soccer. Aussie Rules Football (or just "football" or "footie" in Australia) is different from both American Football and soccer.

    My friend, soccer and Aussie Rules Football are about as much the same thing as NFL and baseball are.
  • Reply 13 of 54
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member
    Hey Sammy, instead of paying your "fans," give them a Galaxy instead.
  • Reply 14 of 54
    The whole campaign sounds very ... odd. Innovation?

    Marketing.
  • Reply 15 of 54
    Obviously Samsung is giving away their devices (especially the Sammy Watch) to celebs like Franz. Samsung is just hilarious.
  • Reply 16 of 54
    The whole concept of having their paid shills USE the product hasn't yet occurred to Sammi yet... It must not be a Korean thang.
  • Reply 17 of 54
    It almost seems like Apple has a mole in Samsung. Mole informs Apple about the adverts; Apple secretly pays the spokesperson to tweet with an iPhone. Very effective counter intelligence.
  • Reply 18 of 54
    Samsung lawyers might suggest a case against Apple...since they need any excuses to counter Apple
  • Reply 19 of 54
    It almost seems like Apple has a mole in Samsung. Mole informs Apple about the adverts; Apple secretly pays the spokesperson to tweet with an iPhone. Very effective counter intelligence.

    Keep dreaming.
  • Reply 20 of 54
    The whole concept of having their paid shills USE the product hasn't yet occurred to Sammi yet... It must not be a Korean thang.

    But Samsung shrugs and asks: "but what's the difference?"
Sign In or Register to comment.