Heinz ran a World Cup social campaign during the 2022 tournament calling out the inadequacy of small condiment packets, according to Marketing Dive. The effort generated 23 million impressions across social platforms by connecting a ubiquitous product frustration to a moment when consumers were actively using condiments — watching matches at home, attending viewing parties, eating stadium food.
The campaign centered on video content showing fans struggling to extract enough ketchup from tiny packets to cover their fries, positioning Heinz's larger retail bottles as the solution. The brand posted content daily throughout the tournament on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok, tagging posts with World Cup keywords and trending match hashtags. Heinz did not buy traditional World Cup sponsorship rights, which cost brands $75 million to $95 million for official FIFA partner status, according to Sponsorship & Event Marketing.
The mechanism works because Heinz named a specific, physical irritation at the exact moment consumers were experiencing it. Small packets require multiple tears, produce inadequate portions, and create waste — friction points that intensify when you are trying to eat quickly during halftime or serve a group. By surfacing this frustration in feed content while viewers were planning watch parties and ordering takeout, Heinz made the brand top-of-mind during a high-consumption window without paying for official tournament access. The content was inherently sharable because it articulated something people felt but had not seen a brand acknowledge.
A small physical-product brand runs this play by identifying a specific friction point in product usage, then creating content that names it during a cultural moment when that friction is acute. Start by listing the five most common complaints or workarounds your product solves — the actions customers take because existing solutions are inadequate. Choose the one that is most visual and most universally felt. Then identify a recurring calendar event, seasonal behavior, or trending topic when that friction intensifies. For a reusable water bottle brand, the friction might be wide-mouth bottles that do not fit cup holders, and the moment might be summer road-trip season. For a kitchen tool, it might be a specific Thanksgiving prep annoyance.
Produce three to five short videos (15-30 seconds each) showing the friction in real use, posted daily during the peak window. Film on a phone. Show the problem first, your product second. Use platform-native formats — Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts. Tag the cultural moment and the product category. Boost the best-performing piece with $200 to $500 in platform ad spend, targeting interest keywords related to the event and the product category. Track saves and shares, not just views — those metrics indicate the content resonated enough to be used later or sent to someone else. Heinz did not create new product; they created new framing for an existing solution at the moment when the problem was most visible.
The broader pattern: consumers tolerate dozens of small product frustrations until a brand names one in a context that makes the irritation newly visible. The World Cup did not create dissatisfaction with tiny ketchup packets, but it created a conversational frame where that dissatisfaction could be articulated and shared. Small brands cannot afford event sponsorships, but they can afford to watch the calendar, know their product's friction points, and post clearly during the windows when those frictions spike.
The takeaway
Name a specific product friction at the moment your audience is actively experiencing it, and the content becomes inherently sharable.
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