CANADIAN RESTAURANT PROMOTION PUTS STICKERS ON NICKELS Publique Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 21, May 27, 2007, Article 18

    CANADIAN RESTAURANT PROMOTION PUTS STICKERS ON NICKELS

    In the 25 May edition of the C.N.A. E-Bulletin of the Canadian
    Numismatic Association (v3n33), editor John Regitko discussed his
    discovery and research on an advertising campaign involving coins.
    Excerpts from the piece appear below:

    I drove to my local Tim Hortons coffee shop on Saturday evening,
    May 19, parked the car and got out. I noticed a shiny coin lying
    on the ground, picked it up and looked at it. It was a 2006 nickel
    with a red round sticker on the obverse with the wording in yellow:
    'www./5centwings/.com' on 3 lines. What's the next thing you do when
    you find a coin on the ground? You look for more, admit it! I found
    another 6 pieces.

    I went on the Internet to see what it was all about. It took me to
    the Website of St. Louis Bar and Grill (whose corporate colors are
    yellow and red, just like the sticker on the nickel). It asks you
    to click on the coupon to download a printable copy. The coupon states:
    'Get an order of six wing pieces for only 5 cents each with the purchase
    of a beverage at any St. Louis Bar and Grill location. Print coupon;
    attach sticker from found nickel; and present at the St. Louis Bar
    and Grill near you! Valid between May 21 and July 21, 2007. Coupon
    holds no cash value. One coupon per person.?

    The coupon might hold no cash value, but the nickel the sticker was
    attached to has a value of 5 cents. Actually, 35 cents for me because
    I walked around the parking lot to pick up all 7. Anyway, I needed
    the exercise.

    In view of the Dr Pepper promotion for a $1 million token, the current
    Volvo promotion for a sunken treasure chest with $50,000 in gold, and
    the ANA promotion where they placed stickers onto quarters, I thought
    I would check it out further. I contacted Barbara Wrona, Executive
    Assistant for St. Louis Franchise Limited, who forwarded my questions
    to Jordanna Shtal at their advertising agency, theadlibgroup Inc.
    According to their website, www.theadlibgroup.com, they also do work
    for Purina, Delta and Holiday Inn, among others. Here are the answers
    to my questions about the St. Louis Bar and Grill nickel campaign.

    Q. How many nickels are you scattering around?
    A. On May 21st, the St. Louis Bar and Grill launched its 8-week long
    nickel campaign. 100,000 nickels branded with the website
    www.5centwings.com were scattered randomly near each of the 21
    restaurant locations across Southern Ontario.

    Q. Did you place a special order directly on the Royal Canadian Mint,
    or did you work through your local bank?
    A. The bank branch obtained them for us.

    [Regitko secured a donation of 300 stickered nickels, which will be
    included in the 2007 C.N.A. Convention's Main and Coin Kids
    registration kits, mounted on an explanatory card. -Editor]

    "'It is not everyday that you see a web site address on a nickel.
    People are going to be curious who's behind this and will visit that
    site to solve the mystery,? Brent Poulton, President of St. Louis
    Bar and Grill, says. Yes, it worked for me. 'Keep your eyes peeled
    for nickels with red stickers at your local parks, bus stops,
    community centres, and high traffic locations,' he adds."

    [The ad agency may have thought it was coming up with a novel
    method of generating buzz, but stickering, overprinting and
    counterstamping currency for advertising purposes has a long
    history. E-Sylum subscriber Cliff Mishler has an extensive
    collection of "stickered dollars" which advertised U.S. businesses
    and political causes. The removable stickers were likely a means
    of following the letter of the law outlawing the counterstamping
    or other alteration of U.S. coins for advertising or any other
    purpose other than use in the channels of commerce. Coincidentally,
    the U.S. Mint has just come down on another promoter which violated
    the law in altering U.S. coins and returning them to circulation -
    see the next item. -Editor]

URL source Date publiée
  • 2007-05-27
Volume
  • 10

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Auteur NNP