The Price of Hype

Would you pay more for a first-round soccer match than a Super Bowl ticket? That question is at the center of a fascinating marketing story unfolding around the 2026 FIFA World Cup. With ticket prices for some matches soaring into thousands of dollars, FIFA is demonstrating the power – and risks – of demand-driven pricing. Fans eager to see stars like Cristiano Ronaldo are paying premium prices, while some consumers and regulators are questioning whether the experience is becoming inaccessible.

At the same time, many consumer brands are moving in the opposite direction. Companies such as McDonald’s, PepsiCo, Target, and Kraft Heinz are introducing lower-priced products, value meals, and smaller package sizes to appeal to budget-conscious customers. Their message to consumers is clear. Affordability can be a powerful marketing strategy.

These two trends highlight an important marketing lesson: successful brands must align pricing with customer expectations and perceived value. FIFA is betting that scarcity, excitement, and emotional attachment will justify higher prices. Consumer brands are betting that value-focused promotions will strengthen customer loyalty and increase sales volume. Both approaches are forms of marketing activation. One leverages exclusivity and urgency to maximize revenue. The other uses promotions and pricing strategies to attract and retain customers. Neither approach is automatically right or wrong. The key question is whether customers believe they are receiving value for the price they pay.

For marketers, the challenge is balancing profitability, brand reputation, and customer satisfaction. When does premium pricing create excitement, and when does it create frustration? That answer may determine whether a campaign becomes a success story or a cautionary tale.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. Why are some consumers willing to pay extremely high prices for World Cup tickets?
  2. How does dynamic pricing influence customer perceptions of fairness?
  3. What are the advantages and risks of using scarcity as a marketing strategy?
  4. Why are many major brands emphasizing value and affordability in 2026?
  5. Which strategy is more effective for building long-term customer loyalty – premium pricing or value pricing?
  6. Dynamic Pricing Case Study. Use online resources to research dynamic pricing in sports or entertainment. Review FIFA’s ticketing information at FIFA Ticketing and prepare a short presentation discussing the benefits and drawbacks of dynamic pricing for both organizations and consumers.
  7. Value Promotion Analysis. Visit the websites of brands such as McDonald’s McValue Menu or Walmart’s Great Value Brand. Identify a current value-focused promotion and evaluate its target audience and marketing objectives.
  8. Ticket Pricing Investigation. Research ticket prices for a major sporting event, concert, or festival. Compare face-value and resale prices and explain the marketing factors driving the difference.

Sources: Nassauer, Sarah, Haddon, Heather and Khan, Natasha (28 May 2026) Americans Are Sick of High Prices. Companies Are Finally Doing Something About It, Wall Street Journal; Bachman, Rachel (30 May 2026), The Summer of Price Gouging, Wall Street Journal; Bachman, Rachel (8 May 2026), The World Cup First-Round Game That Costs More Than a Ticket to the Super Bowl, Wall Street Journal.

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Baby Yoda Sells More Than Movie Tickets

What happens when a brand lifts more than just awareness? In the case of The Mandalorian and Grogu, marketers are literally making ads float and partnering with unexpected brands to reach fans in fresh ways.

In Madrid, Disney and Havas Creative stunned passersby with levitating billboards powered by Andtonic’s magnetic technology. These weren’t optical illusions, but rather actual posters hovered over city streets to promote the new film. It’s a bold example of marketing activation, designed to turn sidewalks into unforgettable touchpoints.

At the same time, Archer Meat Snacks launched its first entertainment partnership by teaming up with the very same movie. The campaign spans streaming ads, retail promotions, co-branded packaging, QR-code incentives, and even a Fandango reward for purchasing snack products. It’s a textbook case of co-branding with a rising CPG (consumer packaged goods) brand borrowing the cultural power of a legendary franchise to expand its audience.

Meanwhile, Disney faces a strategic challenge to bring Star Wars back to theaters after a 6½-year break. The stakes are high, and the marketing must appeal to both lifelong fans and new viewers. Floating posters, cross-category partnerships, theme-park integrations, and gaming tie-ins all support one goal: reigniting excitement for a franchise navigating a rapidly shifting media landscape.

Together, these efforts show how modern marketers must blend creativity, technology, and cross-platform strategy to activate fans across generations. Whether it’s a hovering billboard or a bag of co-branded jerky, the Force is in the marketing.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. Why do you think Disney invested in dramatic outdoor activations like floating billboards? What marketing objectives do they support?
  2. How does Archer benefit from co-branding with The Mandalorian and Grogu, and what risks and benefits might come with that partnership for Disney and Archer?
  3. Which parts of Disney’s multi-platform strategy (theme parks, streaming, gaming, merchandise) do you think matter most for revitalizing the franchise? Why?
  4. How do promotions like QR-code movie rewards influence consumer behavior? If movie theater attendance continues to decline, how should studios rethink their marketing mix?
  5. Ad Intelligence. Using the free social media ad tracking tool Ad Library, ask students to search Disney’s “The Mandalorian and Grogu” ad partnerships to locate active or recent ad creatives across Meta platforms. For each brand, identify the visual style and tone of the ads and the target market.
  6. Marketing Activation Breakdown. In small groups, create a short “activation map” showing every customer touchpoint used in this campaign including Out-of-home (OOH), digital, retail, etc. Identify which touchpoints work best for younger audiences.
  7. Co-Branding Pitch. Students pair up and pick a snack brand. Their task is to design a co-branding idea with a major entertainment franchise. Present the target audience, the creative concept, and a promotional reward.

Sources: Kelly, Chris (13 April 2026), Archer Meat Steaks and The Mandalorian and Grogu, MarketingDive; Masunaga, Samantha and Greene, Sean Greene (23 May 2026) Can Disney recapture the Force with ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’? Los Angeles Times; Nudd, Tim (22 May 2026), The Force is strong with Havas Creative’s new Star Wars billboards in Spain, Ad Age.

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When Doing Good Isn’t Good Enough

What happens when a brand built on doing the right thing gets bought by a company that represents everything it stood against?

That’s exactly what happened to Everlane – the clothing brand that launched in 2011 promising “radical transparency” about its factories, pricing, and ethics. For a decade, it was the poster child of conscious consumerism: the idea that shoppers could vote with their dollars and change the world one ethically sourced crew-neck sweater at a time. Millennials ate it up. Investors poured in hundreds of millions. Stores opened in New York, San Francisco, and beyond.

Then, in May 2026, Shein, the ultra-fast-fashion giant criticized for its labor practices and environmental footprint, bought Everlane for $100 million, a fraction of its $600 million peak valuation. Everlane wasn’t alone in its fall. Allbirds, once the shoe of choice for Silicon Valley sustainability lovers, sold for just 1% of its peak value. Beyond Meat watched revenue collapse as consumers chose actual burgers over plant-based promises at premium prices.

So what went wrong? Forrester Research put it bluntly: brands “ran out of steam when their promises ran afoul of the economics of consumer preference.” Translation – values-based marketing can attract customers, but it can’t keep them if the core product doesn’t deliver superior quality, price, or convenience. Research consistently shows that factors like price, reliability, and design outweigh sustainability when consumers actually open their wallets.

There’s a term for the gap between what consumers say they value and what they actually buy: the values-action gap. Survey after survey shows shoppers claim to prioritize ethics then choose the cheaper option at checkout. For marketing students, this story is a lesson in the limits of purpose-driven branding. A mission can differentiate you. It can build buzz. But it can’t substitute for a genuinely compelling value proposition. The brands that thrive long-term? They do both.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. Look up the ethical ratings of three fashion brands on Good On You. Discuss how the ratings might influence a marketing strategy. Conversely, are marketing campaigns influencing the ratings?
  2. Why do you think consumers say they value ethical products but often choose cheaper or more convenient options instead?
  1. How might influencer culture and TikTok impact the future of conscious consumer brands?
  2. Does a brand risk losing credibility when acquired by a company with different values?
  3. What signals should marketers watch to anticipate when a trend is starting to fade?
  4. Brand Authenticity vs. Positioning: Everlane called its approach “radical transparency.” After its acquisition by Shein, the CEO said the brand would stay “true to its values.” Do you find that credible? What makes a brand’s ethical claims feel authentic versus hollow?
  5. Brand Audit (Pairs): Choose a brand known for sustainability claims. Evaluate whether its messaging aligns with its actual practices. Students present findings to the class.
  6. Consumer Behavior Survey: Create a short poll asking classmates what matters more when shopping: price, quality, or ethics. Analyze how responses compare to industry findings.

Sources:

Koss, Hall and Urwin, Matthew (11 Jan 2024), Conscious Consumerism. What is It? Where Did it Come From? Builtin.com; Schube, Sam (23 May 2026) Why the Dream of the Feel-Good Millennial Brand Didn’t Last, Wall Street Journal; Wahba, Phil (23 May 2026) The Quiet Death of Conscious Consumerism, from Everlane and Allbirds to Beyond Meat, Fortune.

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