Messin’ With Sasquatch Sells Some Jerky

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on February 11th, 2008

Jack's Links Beef Jerky Messin' With Sasquatch

Glen Stubbe, Star Tribune
The Sasquatch ads, created by Minneapolis advertising agency Carmichael Lynch, have attracted an almost cult-like following. “There is a big viral component on YouTube,” said Carmichael CEO John Colasanti, photographed here with Bigfoot. “There’s been 4 million hits on YouTube. You don’t pay for that.”

The making of a monster brand

OK, it’s guy humor. Like when you put shaving cream in the hand of someone who’s asleep and then you tickle their nose until they involuntarily move their hand to their face and give themselves a messy shaving cream bath. That kind of humor.

And it sells beef jerky?

It does when the butt of the joke is the legendary and previously elusive Sasquatch — also known as Bigfoot — and the perpetrators are 20-something males, and sometimes females, walking through the woods eating Jack Link’s Beef Jerky.

An entire advertising campaign for the Wisconsin snack manufacturer has been built around the theme “Messin’ with Sasquatch,” helping Jack Link’s Beef Jerky become the bestselling jerky brand in the United States. The ads have become a hit on the Internet with an almost cult-like following of people who post messages to Sasquatch and make homemade Sasquatch videos.

“We call our demographic ‘adventurous spirits,'” said Troy Link, president of the Minong, Wis.-based company. “They’re 18 to 49. They like American heritage brands like Bud, Coke, Ford. They’re high-energy. They’re social and confident people. The role of Sasquatch is to make the advertisement memorable.”

And Sasquatch is good for business. Jack Link’s jerky and meat products account for 40 percent of a meat snack market that is approaching $3 billion in annual sales. In the two years that Sasquatch has been bellowing at tormentors, Jack Link’s sales have jumped 47 percent in a snack category that rose 12 percent overall, according to ACNielsen.

The Sasquatch concept is the brainchild of Minneapolis advertising agency Carmichael Lynch. It was designed to highlight Jack Link’s signature line, “Feed your wild side.”

Jack Link’s television buy is about $10 million with commercials on programming that appeals to a younger demographic, including extreme sports, ESPN, the Speed Channel, Comedy Central and the Discovery Channel. Sasquatch has been a presence at Wild hockey games as well.

Then there’s the Internet.

“There is a big viral component on YouTube,” said John Colasanti, Carmichael Lynch CEO. “There’s been 4 million hits on YouTube. You don’t pay for that.”

Jack Link’s Beef Jerky was founded with a family recipe in 1985 by Troy Link’s father, Jack, who is CEO of the company. It now has five manufacturing plants — two in Wisconsin and one each in South Dakota, New Zealand and Brazil.

The snack meat, including meat nuggets as well as jerky, comes in flavors ranging from pepper to teriyaki.

In recent years meat snacks have gained in popularity as low-carbohydrate, high-protein alternatives to chips and other snacks.

“We had a great product but people didn’t know who we were,” said Troy Link. “The role of the Sasquatch campaign was to increase brand awareness and preference. It was to make us be known as the cool brand.”

Jim Bendt, chairman of the Minnesota chapter of the American Association of Advertising Agencies and president of the Gabriel DeGrood Bendt agency in Minneapolis, said the Sasquatch campaign is a good example of how advertisers and retailers are targeting the “echo boomer” generation — the children of baby boomers.

“That’s who marketers are really interested in, and technology plays a huge role in how you reach them,” Bendt said. “Technology is second nature to this group and they like to multitask. They’re surfing the Web while they’re watching TV. Marketers find them very elusive.”

The Sasquatch commercials are designed to be mini-tales about life in the wilderness.

One ad shows two hikers who spot Sasquatch cooking a fish over a campfire. One of them sneaks up behind Sasquatch and loosens the cap on the salt shaker. When Sasquatch goes to season his catch, the entire container of salt spills out. A pained “why me?” expression comes across his face.

In another, two guys in a car going down a road in the woods slow down to offer Sasquatch a ride and, each time Sasquatch reaches for the back-door handle, the car speeds up, as the guys in the car crack up in laughter.

Sasquatch, however, usually has the last laugh, or the last thump. In the hitchhiking spot, Sasquatch finally slams the passenger in the car through the windshield and then climbs into his seat. In other spots, pranksters get swatted by Sasquatch’s powerful arms or get hit with a sizable rock.

“The campaign has definitely hit its mark,” said Troy Link.David Phelps, Star Tribune

About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005. I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films: OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.


6 Responses to “Messin’ With Sasquatch Sells Some Jerky”

  1. Spinach Village responds:

    As much as I love seriously researching bigfoot/sasquatch I’m a sucker for these commercials… couldn’t tell u what the product tast like though

    sometimes i ask myself why am i so amused when the sasquatch harasser gets abused?… i dunno, i just am

  2. CamperGuy responds:

    I really do like the humor of the commercials. The very nice bonus is that Sasquatch is portrayed in a positive way as “one of the guys” instead of a dangerous monster.

    I think they resonate because they actually portray guys how guys are. Guys prank their friends knowing they in turn will be on the receiving end of a return prank. Life is good.

  3. michbeliever responds:

    Not too bad of a costume, either. Don’t let that fall into the wrong hands.

  4. squatch-toba responds:

    The ad with the guys in the car offering the Sasquatch a ride is my favorite. It makes me howl every time I see it.

  5. cryptidsrus responds:

    What I like about the advertisements is the fact that ultimately they give Ol’ Hairy some DIGNITY. He is not the ultimate “butt” of the joke. He gets to do payback to the nincompoops who “messed” with him.

    SQUATCH-TOBA:

    The car one is my favorite too. Pure genius.

  6. airforce47 responds:

    Thanks for the posts and the laughs as they’re really great. I like it when old hairy gets the best of the pranksters and the ad agency does a very good job of writing and video.

    A 47% increase in sales does well for the company’s bottom line. As Loren pointed out research money is short for Bigfoot so will they share the wealth?

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

|Top | Content|


Connect with Cryptomundo

Cryptomundo FaceBook Cryptomundo Twitter Cryptomundo Instagram Cryptomundo Pinterest

Advertisers



Creatureplica Fouke Monster Sybilla Irwin



Advertisement

|Top | FarBar|



Attention: This is the end of the usable page!
The images below are preloaded standbys only.
This is helpful to those with slower Internet connections.