Free Sandwich? Bring a Shovel. The Marketing Strategy That Works.
Free Sandwich? Bring a Shovel. The Marketing Strategy That Works.
Published: 9th May 2026
Video
In this video, we answer:
- What was the shovel-for-sandwich campaign and why did it work?
- Was the campaign successful because of the free food or something else?
- How long did customers have to wait between the news release and collection day?
- How long was the collection window?
- Why did customers value the free sandwich highly?
- What happened to prices after the campaign ended?
- What is Step 1 of the 3-step system for ordinary F&B operators?
- What is Step 2 of the 3-step system?
- What is Step 3 of the 3-step system?
- What is the one golden rule for running smart promotions?
Key takeaways:
- Free sandwich. Bring a shovel. It worked.A global chain once ran a campaign. Bring a shovel, get a free sandwich. Sounds crazy, right? But it was a massive success. Not because of the free food. Because of the structure.
- 5 days to create buzz. 3 hours to collect.The offer was not for everyone. Customers had to download the app and snatch a digital coupon five days before the giveaway. News dropped on Monday. For five days, people talked. By Saturday, the response was massive. Collection was only three hours, from 2 to 5 PM.
- They invested time and effort. So they valued the prize.Customers downloaded the app. They snatched the coupon. They brought a shovel. They showed up in a narrow window. Because they worked for it, they valued the sandwich highly. After the campaign ended, prices went back to normal. No discount addiction. No broken pricing power.
- 3-step system for ordinary F&B operators:
- Step 1:Create an entry barrier tied to your restaurant. Bakery? Bring a shovel for free bread. Coffee shop? Thirty percent off if you bring your own mug.
- Step 2:Post signs where customers can see them – in and outside your shop, or on your app.
- Step 3:Track how many coupons were snatched. Prepare enough stock.
- Open coupon snatch at a specific time. One ID, one coupon.Your app must let customers snatch coupons at a specific time, with a limited quantity each day. This creates urgency and scarcity. Then your staff gets the numbers and prepares ingredients to meet demand.
- One golden rule: No free gift.Customers must pay something – their time, their effort, or a small amount of money. Only then will they value the prize. Only then will your campaign create real market response.
- Smart promotions build loyalty. Discounts destroy it.Which one will you run?
Full transcript
[0:00-0:10]
Visual: A person holding a shovel outside a restaurant. Then cut to a digital coupon being snatched on a phone. Customers lining up with shovels in hand. Text fades in: “Free sandwich. Bring a shovel. It worked.”
Narrator (Male, Deep, Confident, American Accent):
A global chain once ran a campaign. Bring a shovel, get a free sandwich. Sounds crazy, right? But it was a massive success. Not because of the free food. Because of the structure.
[0:10-0:25]
Visual: A calendar showing Monday (news released), Tuesday to Friday (5 days of anticipation), Saturday 2-5 PM (collection window). Text appears: “5 days to create buzz. 3 hours to collect.”
Narrator:
Here is how it worked. The offer was not for everyone. Customers had to download the app and snatch a digital coupon five days before the giveaway. News dropped on Monday. For five days, people talked. By Saturday, the response was massive. And collection? Only three hours, from 2 to 5 PM.
[0:25-0:40]
Visual: A customer showing their shovel and coupon at the counter. Smiling staff handing over a sandwich. Text appears: “They invested time and effort. So they valued the prize.”
Narrator:
Customers invested real time and energy. They downloaded the app. They snatched the coupon. They brought a shovel. They showed up in a narrow window. Because they worked for it, they valued the sandwich highly. And after the campaign ended? Prices went back to normal. No discount addiction. No broken pricing power.
[0:40-0:55]
Visual: Three steps appearing on screen: 1. Create an entry barrier. 2. Post visible signage. 3. Track demand and prepare stock.
Narrator:
So can ordinary F&B operators use this? Yes. Step one. Create an entry barrier tied to your restaurant. Bakery? Bring a shovel for free bread. Coffee shop? Thirty percent off if you bring your own mug. Step two. Post signs where customers can see them – in and outside your shop, or on your app. Step three. Track how many coupons were snatched. Prepare enough stock.
[0:55-1:10]
Visual: A smartphone showing a coupon snatch feature – limited time, limited quantity, one per ID. Text appears: “Open coupon snatch at a specific time. One ID, one coupon.”
Narrator:
Your app must let customers snatch coupons at a specific time, with a limited quantity each day. One ID, one coupon. This creates urgency and scarcity. Then your staff gets the numbers and prepares ingredients to meet demand.
[1:10-1:20]
Visual: Final text on screen: “No free gift. Customers must pay with time, effort, or a small amount of money.”
Narrator:
One golden rule. No free gift. Customers must pay something – their time, their effort, or a small amount of money. Only then will they value the prize. And only then will your campaign create real market response.
[1:20-1:25]
Visual: Final text on screen with ARE F&B logo: “Smart promotions build loyalty. Discounts destroy it.”
Narrator:
Smart promotions build loyalty. Discounts destroy it. Which one will you run?
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