You are currently viewing April Foolsโ€™ Roundup 2021: How These Brands Got it Right

April Foolsโ€™ Roundup 2021: How These Brands Got it Right

Whatโ€™s in this article:

  • A good April Foolsโ€™ gag must be topical, self-aware, and funny, all without making consumers feel like theyโ€™re the butt of the joke
  • Marketers planning for April 1, 2022 should take note of this yearโ€™s branded April Foolsโ€™ jokes

April Foolsโ€™ Day can be tough for marketers to navigate. Most brands want to get in on the fun and engage followers, but these pranks often have unintended consequences. A good April Foolsโ€™ gag must be topical, self-aware, and funny, all without making consumers feel like theyโ€™re the butt of the joke. Striking that balance is challenging, making this yearโ€™s best branded April Foolsโ€™ jokes even more impressive.

From nanotech hair dye to multilingual toilet paper, these gags capture the spirit of April Foolsโ€™ day without cheesiness, cringe, or insensitivity. Marketers planning for April 1, 2022 should take note.

Become the best CRMer you can:
CRM Hack: Monitoring the Userโ€™s Heartbeat
What Does It Mean to Treat a Customerโ€™s Email With Respect?
To Lock or Not to Lock Customers (into CRM Journeys)
What the Efforts to Promote Responsible Gaming Look Like Form the Inside

Razer: RGB hair dye

Thereโ€™s so much to love about Razerโ€™s โ€œChroma hair dyeโ€ video. Itโ€™s clearly not an actual product, but we all kind of wish it was. Itโ€™s poking fun at gamersโ€™ love of RGB lighting, but not in a mean way. The box design is reminiscent of Lโ€™Oreal and other well-known hair dyes. Most of all, itโ€™s full of ridiculous details, like โ€œcustomizable per-hair lightingโ€ and 1,337 active ingredients. Itโ€™s a great example of perfectly tailoring a gag to your audience, and gamers responded with thousands of retweets and likes.

Customer marketing challenges and opportunities

Logitech G: A racing wheel for the puppers

Have you ever wished your dog could play video games with you? (If you say no, youโ€™re lying.) Logitech G, once again showing that gaming peripheral companies have a sense of humor, has the solution: a racing wheel built with pups in mind. This tweet is well-crafted for a number of reasons, not least of which is the number of adorable dogs in the video. Just look at those puppers go!

On top of that, it increased engagement by asking followers to share pictures of their own canine racing crews. Using cute animals to score internet points might be the oldest trick in the book, but itโ€™s hard to be mad when youโ€™re scrolling through a Twitter thread full of doggos.

LEGO: Smarter bricks

Anyone whoโ€™s ever stepped on a LEGO brick knows the acute pain, usually followed by a few seconds of stumbling around and screaming obscenities. LEGO finally addressed this issue, which has plagued humankind for decades, in an April Foolsโ€™ project that shows bricks skittering away from unsuspecting feet. In a time where almost everything has a Wi-Fi connection, the SmartBrick feels like an appropriate response.

Like the other brands on this list, LEGO makes its fans feel like theyโ€™re part of the joke, not the subject of it. The simplicity works, too: a 20-second teaser is all this tweet needed to get the message across.

Duolingo: Even smarter toilet paper

Language app Duolingo went above and beyond with its 2021 April Foolsโ€™ joke. Instead of just a tweet, it created an entire website for Duolingo Roll, its made-up toilet paper designed to โ€œturn your bathroom into a classroom.โ€ The site has everything:

  • Hilariously fake reviews like โ€œKeeps my language learning on a regular schedule.โ€
  • A quote from a so-called expert.
  • Promo copy that puts actual corporate websites to shame.

To top it off, this goofy prank still manages to convey Duolingoโ€™s core vision and keep its branding intact. Attempting to buy Duolingo Roll wonโ€™t take you to a checkout page, but it will direct you to the appโ€™s actual website so you can start learning a new language in minutes a day.

The one thing these April Foolsโ€™ jokes have in common is that theyโ€™re not actually trying to fool anyone. By letting consumers in on the joke, these brands can retain their trust while making them feel included. If you want your April Foolsโ€™ pranks to go viral for the right reasons, keeping them inclusive and self-aware is the way to go.

The post April Foolsโ€™ Roundup 2021: How These Brands Got it Right appeared first on Post Funnel.