Coinbase’s Super Bowl stunt netted the crypto wallet company a ton of new users — and with it, way more scrutiny.
It all started with the now-infamous QR code that changed color as it bounced about the screen silently in the ad slot, estimated to have cost $14 million based on known rates for the Super Bowl. The code led those who scanned it to Coinbase’s website, which promised new users they’d get $15 in Bitcoin just for signing up.
The simplicity of the ad, especially in the high-budget, gimmick-filled world of Super Bowl ads, rightfully garnered Coinbase accolades — but when CEO Brian Armstrong tried to claim credit for the idea, things turned decidedly ugly.
The troubled started when Armstrong trashed an unnamed “outside agency,” which he said had pitched Coinbase a “bunch of standard” ideas before the company came up with the concept in-house.
“I guess if there is a lesson here it is that constraints breed creativity, and that as founders you can empower your team to break the rules on marketing because you’re not trying to impress your peers at AdWeek or wherever,” he rhapsodized. “No ad agency would have done this ad.”
There’s just one problem: according to a scorching reply by Kristin Cavallo, the CEO of a creative firm called The Martin Agency, the QR code actually was the work of her team — and she had extremely specific receipts.
“It was actually inspired by presentations our agency showed your team on 8/18 (pages 19-24) and 10/7 (pages 11-18) with ad concepts for the Super Bowl with floating QR codes on a blank screen,” she replied.
That seems to have jogged Armstrong’s memory. Later that afternoon, he fessed up that yes, the concept had actually been thought up an outside firm. Then Coinbase’s chief marketing officer chimed in to acknowledge that the DVD menu-style concept had actually been suggested by multiple outside agencies. Oops!
But because this is the scam- and incompetence-ridden world of block chain, the story doesn’t end there. Coinbase was also apparently woefully unprepared for the amount of traffic this stunt ended up bringing in.
Almost immediately after the QR code graced screens across America, Twitter users began pointing out that the site appeared to have crashed. As one put it, “the future of money can’t even handle a [Super Bowl] commercial.”
“You’d think with billions of dollars of capital,” they added, “that Coinbase would invest in infrastructure to handle the traffic.”
So there you have it: with stolen credit, grandiose proclamations that quickly fall apart, and a service that can’t handle a completely expected surge in popularity, it’s just another day in world of blockchain.
READ MORE: Don’t be Coinbase. Don’t crash your site. [ComputerWorld]
More crypto goofiness: Mark Zuckerberg’s Sister Posts Skin-Crawlingly Horrible Song About Crypto
Care about supporting clean energy adoption? Find out how much money (and planet!) you could save by switching to solar power at UnderstandSolar.com. By signing up through this link, Futurism.com may receive a small commission.