News 27.02.2020

Need to Know

Burger King turns decay into daring marketing, Passbook enables banking for the unbanked, and luxury retail could be stifled by coronavirus.

Realness reigns with Burger King’s mouldy Whopper

Moldy Whopper by Burger King, campaign by INGO, David Miami and Publicis

US – Burger King has launched a shock-factor campaign to shine a light on the removal of artificial preservatives in its products.

Presented as a time-lapse video that documents the deterioration of a Whopper burger over 34 days, the campaign shows the burger gradually changing from its freshly made state to an unappealing serving covered with mould. The campaign is born from the brand's continued focus on rolling out its popular Whopper sandwich without preservatives, colours or flavours from artificial sources.

With the additive-free Whopper available in more than 400 restaurants across the US, the brand hopes to amplify the authenticity of its food through this audacious communication strategy, rounding off the campaign with the tag line: ‘The beauty of no artificial preservatives’. Fernando Machado, global chief marketing officer, says: ‘At Burger King restaurants, we believe that real food tastes better. That’s why we are working hard to remove preservatives, colours and flavours from artificial sources from the food we serve in all countries around the world.’

By drawing attention to the uglier side of its products, Burger King is one of many Backlash Brands which are choosing to stand their ground on issues they care about, rather than bowing to consumers’ expectations.

Passbook salutes the identity of unbanked people

Passbook by Remitly Passbook by Remitly
Passbook by Remitly Passbook by Remitly

US – Passbook is a new bank that not only enables immigrants to manage their finances more easily, it also celebrates their heritage.

Launched by money-transfer start-up Remitly, Passbook is designed to remedy the issues faced by people who do not have an American social security number or other form of US-originated identification. Instead, it empowers them to use a range of picture IDs, such as a passport from their home nation. In turn, customers opening an account receive a bank card with their national flag positioned above their name in homage to their identity.

In this way, Passbook is working to assist the 1.7bn people globally who remain unbanked and off the financial grid (source: World Bank). As Remitly CEO and co-founder Matt Oppenheimer notes: ‘Passbook is the next step in Remitly’s mission to transform the lives of the millions of immigrants around the world who make the huge sacrifice of leaving their families behind to live and work in another country.’

Amid the rise of high-level mobile adoption, growth in e-payments, biometric identification and currency digitisation, companies like Remitly are playing a positive role in Banking the Unbanked.

Tesco’s plasters are a lesson in brand inclusivity

UK – Supermarket chain Tesco is demonstrating inclusivity in action with its latest personal care product – fabric plasters available in multiple skin tones.

Created in light, medium and dark tones, the plasters cater for more diverse skin tones and are designed to better represent UK citizens. They were developed after a Tesco employee saw a Tweet describing the emotional response a man had after first using a plaster that matched his own skin tone.

The product development was supported by the brand’s internal colleague network, BAME at Tesco, which tested the plasters, gathered feedback from friends and family, and had a say in the final design of the product. Uche Ezugwu, creative director for BBH London, which created the campaign, says: ‘The UK’s biggest retailer has just moved the dial on something that needed to change.’

Coinciding with the launch is a UK-wide advertising campaign that reads ‘About bloody time', with the swear word plastered over.

By consulting its own staff in the creation of the plasters, Tesco is demonstrating its effort to be a more inclusive business inside and out, something Bridgette Howard, founder of beauty incubator Parlor West Ventures, discusses further in Why beauty brands need a holistic approach to diversity.

About bloody time campaign by Tesco

Stat: Luxury feels the impact of coronavirus

According to luxury organisation Altagamma, Boston Consulting Group and investment firm Bernstein, luxury brands are set to lose up to £8.3bn ($10.7bn, €10bn) in profits in 2020 owing to the impact of the coronavirus. The research even suggests that luxury brands have little chance of returning to normal trading conditions before the beginning of 2021.

In a series of infographics shared by Altagamma, luxury brands are forecasting a fall in sales of between £25bn ($32bn, €30bn) and £33bn ($43bn, €40bn), bringing the value of the personal luxury market in 2020 to between £256.5bn ($332bn, €309bn) and £264.7bn ($342.5bn, €319bn) – its lowest since 2015. Having hit companies from Burberry to LVMH and Capri Holdings, the epidemic has confirmed just how heavily the luxury sector relies on Chinese consumers, as well as international travel.

For other factors contributing to the luxury sector’s state of flux, explore our State of Luxury series where we uncover the changing behaviour of affluent consumers in global markets, from the US and France to Poland and South Korea.

Previous News Articles
Future Château launches mid-strength wines at Selfridges

News

Future Château launches mid-strength wines at Selfridges

Future Château, the new wine brand from author Tom Benn, is launching at Selfridges in October 2025 with a debut range of premium 5% ABV wines desi...
Drinks : Retail : Food
OpenArea reframes nature as cultural canvas with new London festival

News

OpenArea reframes nature as cultural canvas with new London festival

OpenArea, the brainchild of cultural strategist Ollie Olanipekun, transformed Camley Street Nature Reserve in King’s Cross into a vibrant hub of ar...
Nature : Food : Design
Stat: Americans push back against tipflation

News

Stat: Americans push back against tipflation

Tipping fatigue is intensifying across the US, with 65% of consumers saying they are tired of tipping – up from 53% in 2023, according to Popmenu’s...
Retail : US Market : Hospitality
Lancôme opens luxury retreat space and cafe in Doha airport

News

Lancôme opens luxury retreat space and cafe in Doha airport

Lancôme has unveiled Café de la Rose inside Doha’s Hamad International Airport, its first travel retail café and only the second globally.
Retail : Beauty : Travel
Foresight Friday: Rose Coffey, senior foresight analyst

News

Foresight Friday: Rose Coffey, senior foresight analyst

Every Friday, The Future Laboratory team offers an end-of-week wrap-up of the topics, issues, ideas and virals we’re all talking about. This week, ...
Foresight Friday : Fashion : Beauty
Stat: Americans turn to travel to connect with loved ones

News

Stat: Americans turn to travel to connect with loved ones

A new survey from Hyatt’s Inclusive Collection reveals Americans are craving more meaningful time with loved ones, and travel is emerging as a key ...
Travel : Statistic : Optimised Odysseys
Toyota opens Woven City as a living lab for future lifestyles

News

Toyota opens Woven City as a living lab for future lifestyles

Toyota has opened its experimental Woven City at the base of Mount Fuji, creating a testbed where residents live alongside prototypes of emerging t...
Technology : Design : Toyota
Stella McCartney launches luxury live-stream shopping platform

News

Stella McCartney launches luxury live-stream shopping platform

Stella McCartney has introduced Shop With Stella, an interactive shopping event co-hosted by actor Eva Mendes and powered by Swedish video commerce...
Retail : Luxury : Livestream
Stat: The fashion industry’s hottest climate risk is factory workers’ health

News

Stat: The fashion industry’s hottest climate risk is factory workers’ health

A September 2025 report by the Fashion Revolution movement reveals that the fashion industry is failing to measure dangerous factory temperatures, ...
Fashion : Sustainability : Stat
Claude’s Keep Thinking campaign positions AI agent as problem-solving tool

News

Claude’s Keep Thinking campaign positions AI agent as problem-solving tool

In a new campaign entitled Keep Thinking, AI agent Claude is framed as the go-to tool for problem-solvers.
AI : Co-creation : Campaign
You have 2 free News articles remaining. Sign up to LS:N Global to get unlimited access to all articles.
BECOME A MEMBER
SIGN IN