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[personal profile] brooksmoses
Sometime this morning, someone came by and put nutella on our doorknob.

A sample container thereof, I should point out. It's a plastic baggie, about the size and roughly the coloration of a standard-issue doorknob pizza delivery menu, except that instead of lists of pepperoni and mozzerella on it, it has "Spreadably delicious" and a picture of a jar of nutella, and "free sample!" Inside, indeed, is a small container -- the sort that normally contains grape jelly, strawberry jam, or orange marmalade at a pancake house -- of nutella. And a package containing two crackers, presumably for spreading the nutella on, if one happens to be without.

And I noticed this evening, while walking to my car at the train station, that all of the townhouses there had identical packages on their doorknobs as well. (And [livejournal.com profile] leback reports that they got some, too.) This is, at a rough guess, a campaign involving tens, if not hundreds, of pounds of little nutella samples.

I am finding this all very strange. Why a massive door-to-door marketing campaign for nutella here? And why now?

Date: 2005-10-06 06:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nolly.livejournal.com
And why not here? Mmmmm, Nutella...

Date: 2005-10-06 12:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
On a cracker? How eccentric. I just ate mine on a flour tortilla. I was too lazy to cut up strawberries on it, but tomorrow morning, if [livejournal.com profile] timprov hasn't eaten all the strawberries....

Date: 2005-10-06 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elisteran.livejournal.com
Heh. I misread that on my first two passes as indicating some prankster had smeared it all over your doorknob, and that you were going to highlight just how -expensive- that would be (I love nutella, but it's quite pricy for what you get).

Date: 2005-10-07 04:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kcatalyst.livejournal.com
We got some too!

Date: 2005-10-21 01:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fourgates.livejournal.com
In Germany, Nutella is (IIRC) about a popular and well-known as Skippy peanut butter, yet it's basically unknown in the US. Getting North Americans hooked could be a $billion franchise -- worth giving away some free samples of what is essentially a cheap, high-margin product. In fact, in order to get critical mass in mindshare, carpet-bombing the free samples may be exactly what is needed.
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