Pizza Hut And Amex Team Up on Foursquare for Super Bowl

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Pizza Hut And Amex Team Up on Foursquare for Super Bowl
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Here is why it's interesting for Pizza Hut. Foursquare users don't have to check in at any of Pizza Hut's 6,000 restaurants. Whenever Amex members check in to the geo-social app's "Super Swarm Sunday" feature created for the big game, they will receive a statement credit after ordering from Pizza Hut online, by phone, or in stores.

They have to pay with their Amex cards, which need to be synced up to their Foursquare acounts. Then, Foursquare will send them an alert about the money-back reward within moments after the Pizza Hut purchase.

Foursquare's Challenge

While a compelling marketing innovation, the Foursquare initiative appears to be but a small piece to Pizza Hut's larger efforts for Super Bowl XLVI. For instance, the Plano, TX-based brand will run a pre-game ad on NBC. The spot is the result of a user-generated video contest on the brand's 83,000 Twitter followers about the Foursquare offer. Because of Pizza Hut's current $10 deal for any kind of pizza, Amex users would stand to buy pies from the chain for roughly $5 apiece - after the $5 credit is applied.

The Super Bowl is in three days. Not surprisingly, the brand's community managers have published numerous messages about Sunday's huge TV event in which it will participate.

For all the marketer interest in Foursquare, Pizza Hut's lack of attention to the deal offer so far seems to speak volumes about where geo-social stands in the real-world pecking order of advertising. In other words, platforms at reasonable scale like Facebook (845 million users) and Twitter (100 million) are welcome in King TV's court. New York-based Foursquare, with its 15 million users, appears to be still working towards such an invite.

Mobile Marketing Taking Shape Around Big Game

Meanwhile, the Pizza Hut offer extends a Amex-Foursquare relationship that became serious in March 2011. The development also underscores how many marketers seem to be viewing Sunday's big game as intriguing juncture in the evolution of mobile or so-called second-screen marketing.

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