In the National Museum of American History, there is a cabinet full of keys-keys that fit the 73 cars in the automobile collection. Most are sitting under car covers…but now the covers are coming off! Nearly 24,000 people voted within 3 weeks via a viral online marketing campaign with virtually no budget. The "Race to the Museum" initiative won a 2011 MUSE Award for Public Outreach.
4. “In the National Museum of American History, there is a cabinet full of keys—keys that fit the 73 cars in the automobile collection. Most are sitting under car covers...but now the covers are coming off!”
We used the Museum’s blog to announce the upcoming public vote. The blog typically gets 25,000 visits a month.
Blog posts about each auto contestantThe content of the initiative was engaging and informative--this wasn't just a marketing gimmick but high-quality history shared openly. We were able to take a relatively shy curator with incredibly deep historical knowledge of automobile innovations and make him a social media darling. His blog posts provided intriguing behind-the-scenes details and brought readers virtually into the vaults.Roger introduced us to eight of the jewels of the Smithsonian car collection, covering 120 years of history and presented in order from the oldest to the newest. At the end of the series, the public vote was opened.
Top billing in January enewsletter to existing mailing list (~24,000)
Facebook posts helped pique interest in the automobiles prior to the public vote
The story was picked up by the Washington Post with a half-page of photos and background about the campaign--an earned media slot that would have cost the Museum over $50,000 if purchased through paid media.
We engagedinfluencers on Twitter.Auto bloggers, fan clubs and enthusiasts, and journalists picked up the story.
POLL attendees: Which car would you vote for?Vote for your favorite of 8 automotive jewels in the Smithsonian car collection, covering 120 years of history.
And the winner is…Miller race car, 1929 Harry Miller’s eight-cylinder, supercharged, front wheel drive race cars hit the tracks in the late 1920s, and the dozen demons were unlike anything the competition could offer.Tucker sedan, 1948 Today the 46 remaining Tucker sedans, housed in museums and private collections, preserve the legacy of the man who tried to change America’s driving habits. This Tucker was forfeited in a drug arrest.
FOX news covered moving day: http://www.myfoxdc.com/dpp/mornings/holly_live/holly-morris-race-to-the-museum-at-the-smithsonian-national-museum-of-american-history-012111Also, AP TV: http://landing.newsinc.com/shared/video.html?freewheel=90120&sitesection=autoblog&VID=23314946
On "moving day," several news crews covered the event and the Museum used its YouTube channel to bring visitors behind the scenes from storage facility to final display.“These two vehicles are powerful cars from our past that blew everyone away with their looks and performance,” said curator Roger White. “They are not mainstream vehicles, but they represent the diversity of the museum’s automotive collection, which spans many technological and aesthetic highlights.”
The winning cars, a 1929 Miller Race Car and a 1948 Tucker Sedan, went on display for a limited time to drive traffic to the physical Museum during a traditionally low-visitation period. 6.5% increase equals 19,586 more visitors