Craving
Fruit Brute
Since 1983.
Click HERE to register.


 Forgot your info?
Remember me

Don't mess
with the bull.
JOIN!!!
3 COMMENTS
RETRORATING: 8
FAVORITED 2 TIMES

The Pepsi Gotta Have It Card

In the early 90's, Pepsi decided to change their logo and update their ad campaign which had grown stale since the big Pepsi Challenge of the 1970's. They hired the hottest woman on Earth at the time, Cindy Crawford, and introduced the new Pepsi logo with this amazing commercial during the 1992 Superbowl.
 

Armed with this great new ad campaign and a new logo that was embraced, Pepsi launched a new slogan, "Gotta Have It." It was simple, catchy, and looked good on a t-shirt.


Pepsi was cool and all us kids knew it. It was the first time I'd ever seen a major logo change and I was enamored with the new Pepsi vending machines featuring this snazzy new logo.

   220px-Pepsi_logo.svg
Pebsi-Logo

Pepsi went from being a boring soft drink to the newest and coolest thing to drink. But Pepsi still had one more marketing tactic up their sleeve, and that was the Pepsi Gotta Have It card.

 
The Gotta Have It card was a discount card that you could get free inside specially marked packages of Pepsi, or at random places like malls or convenience stores. The card was good for discounts at Blockbuster, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Eddie Bauer, Avis, MCI, and Continental Airlines. Some of the discounts had deadlines, but most were generic percentages off or rent three get one free type deals. 

Over 40 million cards were distributed the summer of 1992 to the thrill of kids everywhere. Why kids? Well it looked like a credit card. It had punched numbers in it and a place for a signature, and these were so readily available every kid was able to get their hands on one or ten of these. We'd put them in our wallets and walk around feeling grown up because we had a hard plastic card that actually meant something in our wallets. 

I only remember once ever using the discount, and that was at a Blockbuster. The sense of pride I had pulling out my handy Gotta Have It card to get my dad a free rental was intense. I knew then I was grown up, I handed a clerk a plastic card. Apparently the promotion was basically no risk to Pepsi and it worked out well for the retailers involved. It didn't last very long, but it definitely left a lasting impression on me.

Digg Share
Looking for more from massreality?
READ 103797 TIMES
Close

massreality Posted on Apr 18, 2015 at 05:29 AM

Thanks Hojo. I'm glad you enjoyed it. And Vapor, man I feel ya on the real credit cards. Sheesh!

Vaporman87 Posted on Apr 14, 2015 at 03:33 PM

Speaking of "plastic", I can recall purchasing wallets and pretending that the "cards" that came with it were actually valid and I would purchase myself several toys (that I just happened to already own). Ahhh, youth. Those charges were ones I never had to repay. If only it were that way with the cards I have now. LOL

Hoju Koolander Posted on Apr 14, 2015 at 01:49 AM

Pretty awesome recollection of that brief moment in time. I wasn't allowed to drink caffeinated sodas, but the look of the Pepsi can prior to this re-design was such an iconic symbol of my childhood. I even invested in Pepsi Co. During my 6th grade stock market investment project. Way to dig up an not often discussed, but awesome topic. Well written too.

A Closer Look At: The 13 Days of Halloween

     The time has come yet again boils and ghouls. The season of freaks and monsters is upon us once again as Halloween comes arou...

5 Retro Movies You Should Watch For Halloween

It's that time of year again! It's almost time for Halloween. The time where we carve silly and scary faces into pumpkins, dress up in wacky costumes,...

Edutainment Station: The Magic School Bus

       Seatbelts everyone! As school starts back up and kids go to class, it's about time we get some smarts of our own. But wi...

The NES and Sega Genesis Console War

When I was a wee toddler, I hadn't known much about video games at the time, I never got to play the Atari 2600, The Commodore 64, anything prior to t...

Mad Scientist: A Great Forgotten 80s Toyline

  It was 1986, and slime was starting to become big in the toy industry. This was the year that The Real Ghostbusters would hit the shelves for ...