"PENNY DROP" PUBLICITY STUNT LOGISTICS 上市 Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 18, April 30, 2006, Article 27

    "PENNY DROP" PUBLICITY STUNT LOGISTICS

    Regarding the National Coin Week "penny drop" stunt, Gary Dunaier
    writes: "Unless the actual purchase is done with no media present,
    what's there to prevent the merchant with whom the coin is spent
    from putting it aside and subsequently turning it in himself?"

    [Well, when I saw the photos of all the press surrounding Scott
    Travers in New York, I wondered just how the coin drop COULD work
    without the merchant suspecting something and immediately pocketing
    the coins. There's never a guarantee that the merchant or clerk
    won't spot the coin and immediately set it aside.

    When I did my coin drop in Pittsburgh I picked a busy bakery at
    lunchtime (with no media in tow), when I figured no one would have
    time to examine coins. I went back to the bakery following the coin
    show and told the staff what I'd done. They'd seen the publicity
    about the coins and had searched their tills, but no one found the
    coin.

    As far as we knew, it had been handed back out in change shortly
    after I'd spent it. Most likely, it went straight into someone's
    dresser drawer or coin jar.

    The Lincoln cent is the longest-lived of current coin designs, and
    provides the best cover for a scarce coin. Pre-1965 silver coins
    are out because the color and sound of silver would draw immediate
    attention. I'm waiting for someone to use a scarce state quarter,
    like the extra corn leaf variety. But varieties are much harder to
    describe in a press release than a simple date/mintmark combination.
    We never repeated the coin drop in Pittsburgh out of courtesy to the
    local coin dealers - the publicity set their phones ringing with
    callers who seemed to think they could cash in their 1994 cents for
    $100 apiece. -Editor]

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  • 2006-04-30
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