G-Series Mobile Locker Room

Best Campaign Targeting a Micro Audience

G-Series Mobile Locker Room
Agency: Fathom Communications
Client: Gatorade

The G-Series – G1, G2 and G3 – is a new line of Gatorade products that provides serious athletes with fuel, fluid and nutrients before, during and after athletic activity. To support the product’s launch, Gatorade was looking for a niched marketing effort that would integrate well with a grassroots program driving awareness, buzz and purchase intent among elite high school athletes.

Fathom created the G-Series Mobile Locker Room, a double-wide expandable trailer that traveled to eight hand-picked high schools between March and April. They chose a locker room format because it is the setting for pre-game rituals, inspirational coaching speeches and mid-game and spirited celebrations after the game.

The locker room was loaded with amenities ranging from X-Box 360s to satellite radio, Direct TV, Internet stations and a 60-inch SmartBoard. Key programming elements included hydration talks, fluid loss testing, chalk talks (high school memories and advice from regional professional athletes), product sampling and social sharing capability through the Internet.

School-generated content (school TV, newspapers and video clubs) were engaged to chronicle the G-Series Locker Room events and how their athletes prepared, performed and recovered. All the content was distributed locally and also posted on Gatorade’s website to further the program’s reach.

The G-Series Mobile Locker Room successfully immersed its specific consumer segment—elite high school athletes—in Gatorade’s new G-Series product. More than 2,500 varsity high school athletes participated, of which 98.8% “strongly agreed” or “agreed” that the G-Series Mobile Locker Room was very positive and worthwhile. Roughly 92.2% of engaged student athletes planned to tell, email or text friends about their G-Series Mobile Locker Room experience, while 86% planned to access or forward content. Overall, the program generated more than 24 million media impressions.

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