Company: Cisco Systems
Contact: Marie Hattar, Vice-President of Marketing, Network Systems and Security Solutions
Location: San Jose, CA
Industry: Computer hardware and software
Annual revenue: $39,500,000,000
Number of employees: 66558

Quick Read

Forget the norms. For Cisco Systems, reinvigorating its security line and authenticating its leadership position meant taking risks, challenging the usual conventions of its marketing programs, and finding novel ways to engage its target market where they work and play.

So Marie Hattar, VP of marketing for the company's Network Systems and Security Solutions unit, tried turning the whole 80/20 promotion/creative-spend equation upside down. Rather than investing 80% of the company's campaign budget in media buys, she put it toward crafting a unique and entertaining user experience that played heavily into user hobbies and interests. She then leveraged social media to supplement her modest media buys and help users spread the word for free.

The campaign, which featured superheroes characterizing the company's product strengths, became a paranormal phenomenon all its own, achieving high levels of engagement and a die-hard enthusiasm among fans that has even led to new merchandising opportunities for the company.

Challenge

Cisco Systems is a global provider of Internet networking and security solutions for businesses big and small. Its suite of IT security systems includes hardware appliances, software, security as a service, and risk-assessment services. It is designed to help companies minimize security and compliance risk, prevent data loss, and quickly respond to emerging security threats.

Early in 2009, the company sought to both reinvigorate interest in its line of security systems among its target market of IT professionals and validate its position as category leader.

The blueprint for success, it felt, would come through developing fresh digital content that would serve to not only educate but also engross target users to the point that they would spend more time interacting with the brand and feel inclined to share the experience with peers.

"We aspired to create a new campaign that could be more viral [than our previous campaigns]," said Hattar, "something that would allow us to leverage social media, engage visitors, and get people to click more and stay longer because we had created such interesting content."

Campaign

The company's market research highlighted two consistent areas of interest among this group—comic books and gaming. Since crafting a game cool enough to grab this audience's interest looked to be a sizable feat, Hattar instead decided to leverage comic-book characters as the means for capturing market attention and engagement.

In cooperation with its agency, Ogilvy West, Cisco contracted the well-known graphics illustrator Mike Mayhew (known for his work with Marvel Comics and involvement in films such as X-Men Origins: Wolverine, The Fantastic Four, and Superman Returns) to create a series of four motion comic webisodes starring four superheroes, each an embodiment of a Cisco security solution.

The superhero leader Jux, for example, personifies the company's MARS (Monitoring, Analysis and Response System) "central intelligence" product, while another defender, Trace, represents the company's email and Web security appliances, content-filtering services, and spam and virus blockers.

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Case Study: How to Spark Fanatical Engagement and Advocacy by Heroically Tapping Into User Interests

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kimberly Smith is a freelance writer. Reach her via dtkgsmith@gmail.com.

LinkedIn: Kim Smith