Kids Go HoJo with Sega

From Sega Retro

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Kids Go HoJo with Sega was a Sega of America-sponsored advertising campaign for the American hotel/motel chain Howard Johnson's, produced by Californian marketing firm Strottman International[1] and run during the summers of 1993, 1994, and 1995.

Campaign

The campaign saw a significant amount of television advertising.

Born from a venture between Sega of America and the American chain of hotels and motels Howard Johnson's, Kids Go HoJo with Sega was a unique summer promotion intended to increase room sales at the company's properties by making the chain seen more enticing to the children of possible guests. The promotion ran in all Howard Johnson's across the United States of America and Canada over three periods: From May 24th through September 6th, 1993[2][3], from May 27th through September 5th, 1994[4][5], and from May 27th through September 4th, 1995.[6][7] During the promotion, all the company's hotels, motels, and inns were equipped with life-size cutouts of Sonic the Hedgehog displayed in the lobby for guests to take souvenir photographs with.

Sega provided Howard Johnson's properties with Sega Game Gears and a small library of games for guests to play at no charge. Through the Kids Go HoJo Fun Club, children were also provided with a collectible series of FunPacks containing Sega-themed puzzles, games, booklets, and toys, and a free one-year subscription to Sega Visions magazine. Additionally, a pair of VHS promotional features were available to rent or purchase - Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 1 and Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 2.

Game Gear rentals

Standard models of the Sega Game Gear were available as free rentals to guests and their children, along with a small selection of games.

List of rentable games

FunPacks

Larger hotel chains frequently provide the children of guests with small collections of activities and toys, both as a form of personal entertainment, and as a means to keep restless children occupied during long stays. Upon the launch of Kids Go HoJo with Sega, the chain released a new series of their existing FunPack activity packs with Sega-related properties - colorable postcards featured Ecco the Dolphin and Tempo, and activity books prominently featured the character Ristar.

Sega Game Gear Tips

Main article: Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 1, Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 2

One of the campaigns most-remembered features, and the one most associated with Kids Go HoJo with Sega today, is the series of 1995 promotional VHS tapes Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 1 and Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 2. Produced by Canadian video production company St. Michel Productions[8] and available for guests and their children as a free rental, each tape features a series of different tips for the chain's available Sega Game Gear games, are are both built around the same main video - an extended advertisement where a Howard Johnson's spokesperson promotes both the Game Gear and the hotel's amenities.

The advertisement's infamous presentation and filmmaking style.

Produced with a great deal of influence from Sega of America's attitude-filled marketing (particularly as it began migrating towards more high-energy advertising), the advertisement was created to be fast, flashy, and attention-getting, with quick cuts and a literal strobe light blinking intermittently in most scenes. Additionally, the premise was intentionally produced to feature the Howard Johnson's spokesperson repeatedly harassing and stalking a visibly-disturbed guest for the entirety of the advertisement, and at one point even gestures at beginning a sex scene between said guest and a hotel maid; concerningly adult for a product intended for young children.

As Howard Johnson's faded in popularity, so did its name. With the maturing of the internet and the establishment of websites like YouTube, the promotional advertisement soon became associated with the now lesser-known company, and frequently to such a degree that some are only familiar with the hotel chain through this single video.


History

Background

Kids have a tremendous amount of influence - far more than you would think - in choosing a hotel.

Kids Go HoJo creator Barry Parish[5]


Kids Go HoJo was created by Howard Johnson's vice president of marketing Barry Parish[9][10] around mid to late 1991[11] to address the company's stodgy image and slipping occupancy rates[10], playing to the decision-making power of the guests' children by way of amenities specifically catered to them (like video game arcades and children's activity packages.) While not an unheard-of concept, Parish consolidated all the necessary ideas and business practices under one unified branding, and proceeded to advertise the chain not just to parents, but to their children as well. Most notably, the packages' items would feature the branding and likenesses of America's most recognizable franchises.[5][12][13]

Soon, Kids Go HoJo became a renowned success, and Parish sought to further capitalize on this momentum by collaborating with one of the largest rising names in the American video game industry: Sega of America (and particularly their world-famous mascot, Sonic the Hedgehog.) Parish made the necessary agreements with Sega, and contracted Irvine, California-based[14] advertising agency Strottman International to produce and coordinate the promotion, and New York, New York-based advertising agency Christy McDougall Mitchell[15][16] to produce the campaign's television advertisements. Responsibilities largely fell to one of Strottman's marketers, Michael Berreth, who was significantly involved in the creation and development of the campaign[17][18][19] (and would later receive a CSPA award for his efforts.[20])

Run

Kids Go HoJo with Sega was supported by a $3,500,000 advertising campaign, including commercials on national television, print advertisements, and radio promotions, as well as local, grassroots promotions in smaller advertising areas.[2]

The campaign was largely a success, with Howard Johnson's seeing a notable 9% increase in room sales and becoming the leader of its respective consumer lodging market.[10][21]

Legacy

Kids Go HoJo with Sega's success was soon noticed within the hospitality industry, and within the next two years, at least nine other brands launched similar programs.[12] For its accomplishments with the campaign, Strottman International was awarded the CSPA Award of Excellence for Best Worldwide Traffic-Building Promotion.

While altogether a successful campaign, Howard Johnson's name recognition eventually began to fade, and the chain would lose much of its former marketshare over the next two decades. With the advent of video sharing websites, uploaded copies of the promotional VHS tapes Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 1 and Sega Game Gear Tips Volume 2 began to appear, and later became minor viral sensations, such to a point that many only know the hotel chain through this promotional video alone.

Despite the campaign's unflattering modern associations, it still enjoys a more positive legacy in the marketing industry, and is remembered as one of the more notable and successful hotel advertising campaigns.

Magazine articles

Main article: Kids Go HoJo with Sega/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

Television advertisements

Television advertisement.
Television advertisement.

Print advertisements

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Print advert in Sega Visions (US) #12: "April/May 1993" (1993-xx-xx)
also published in:
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Print advert in Sega Visions (US) #18: "April/May 1994" (1994-xx-xx)
also published in:
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Print advert in Sega Visions (US) #24: "May 1995" (1995-xx-xx)
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Merchandise

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Leaflet.
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Advertisement.
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Poster.
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Shirt.
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Shirt (detail; front)
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Shirt (detail; rear)
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Shirt (detail; tag)
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Images

1993 FunPack

1994 FunPack

1995 FunPack

Logos

External links

References