Doritos Wins Brand Bowl 2012

Twitter Users Select Doritos as Most Effective Brand on this Year’s Super Bowl Telecast

Mullen and Boston.com Use SalesForce Radian6 Social Media Analysis to Create Real-Time Ranking of the Best and Worst Super Bowl Commercials

According to the 400,000 tweets monitored by BrandBowl2012, Doritos was the most effective brand to advertise on the Super Bowl telecast on the NBC Television Network this year. Brand Bowl ranks brands based on volume of chatter and positive/negative commentary on Twitter in reaction to their Super Bowl commercials.

Doritos won with its “Crash the Super Bowl” consumer-generated commercials. One spot featured a dog who bribed a man with Doritos to conceal the whereabouts of the family cat. A second spot featured a grandmother who sling-shots a baby in a swinging seat toward a tree fort to grab a bag of Doritos from a little boy. The second and third place overall finishers were Swedish apparel retailer H&M with a provocative spot starring soccer star David Beckham modeling underwear, and Chrysler, with a powerful message about the American economic recovery. The Chrysler commercial starred legendary actor/director Clint Eastwood. The spots appeared during a closely contested game between the New York Giants and the New England Patriots.

Brand Bowl Top Scorers

When all was said and done, the top ten brands (a combination of volume and popularity) were:

1. Doritos (48,811 Tweets) (Sentiment +29%)

2. H&M (44,031 Tweets) (Sentiment +14%)

3. Chrysler (33,943 Tweets) (Sentiment +10%)

4. Pepsi (39,765 Tweets) (Sentiment +8%)

5. Chevrolet (36,934 Tweets) (Sentiment +17%)

6. M&M’s (18,316 Tweets) (Sentiment +41%)

7. Budweiser (18,916 Tweets) (Sentiment +12%)

8. VW (17,131 Tweets) (Sentiment +26%)

9. Coke (18,463 Tweets) (Sentiment +4%)

10. Bud Light (15,298 Tweets) (Sentiment +18%)

Most Liked Brands

Those with the highest number of “positive” tweets were:

1. M&M’s (Sentiment +41%)

2. Best Buy (Sentiment +30%)

3. Doritos (Sentiment +29%)

Least Liked Brands

Those with the highest number of “negative” tweets were:

1. Go Daddy (Sentiment -10%)

2. Cars.com (Sentiment -2%)

3. Lexus (Sentiment -1%)

Most Volume of Tweets

The most talked-about brands (those with the highest number of overall tweets) were:

1. Doritos (48,811 Tweets)

2. H&M (44,031 Tweets)

3. Pepsi (39,765 Tweets)

The Five Least Effective Brands on Brand Bowl 2012

Those with a combination of low volume of chatter and low positive commentary:

1. Cadillac (Tweets 345) (Sentiment +2%)

2. Century 21 (Tweets 520) (Sentiment +6%)

3. Lexus (Tweets 922) (Sentiment -1%)

4. CareerBuilder (tweets 1001) (Sentiment +5%)

5. Hulu (Tweets 1191) (Sentiment +10%)

Mullen, a Boston-based advertising and social media agency and Boston.com, one of the nation’s largest regional news portals, teamed up to present BrandBowl2012, a Twitter/Super Bowl experience that used real-time analytics from SalesForce Radian6 to determine which brands were getting the most and least amount of commentary and which brands were getting the most positive and negative tweets during the telecast. BrandBowl2012 ranked the commercials using some of the most comprehensive social media metrics available to analyze the full Twitter data stream.

This is the fourth year that Mullen has run Brand Bowl and its second year of partnering with Boston.com to create the online experience where participants could view their tweets and see the dynamic brand rankings during the game. New features this year included:

– “Head-to-head” statistical breakdowns between brands
– A “featured tweet” section that highlighted funny and insightful tweets from participants
– A streamlined Brand Bowl mobile experience so users could more easily see the live rankings and tweet their votes.

“This was truly a watershed year for social media and the Super Bowl,” said Edward Boches, Chief Innovation Officer at Mullen. “With nearly 200 million people on Twitter and 2/3’s of all smart-phone owners using social media while watching TV, just about every brand built interactive elements into their commercials, knowing that the true measurement of success these days is immediate consumer reaction and long-term consumer engagement.”

“We were very happy to once again host Brand Bowl with Mullen. We believe in the importance of social media as a tool for the public to share their commentary with the world,” said Ron Agrella, editor of Boston.com. “We were thrilled that so many people participated.”

Boston.com is one of the most visited regional portals in the U.S. and is wholly owned by The New York Times Company, a leading global, multimedia news and information company with 2011 revenues of $2.3 billion, that includes The New York Times, the International Herald Tribune, The Boston Globe, NYTimes.com, BostonGlobe.com, Boston.com, About.com and related properties. The Company’s core purpose is to enhance society by creating, collecting and distributing high-quality news, information and entertainment.

Mullen is a leading, Ad Age A-List advertising agency, named the fourth most innovative marketing company in America by Fast Company. Mullen is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Interpublic Group of Companies (NYSE: IPG).