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How 6 colorful characters propelled M&M's to become America's favorite candy

m&m's

David Adam Kess/Wikimedia Commons

M&M's are recognizable the world-over.

By the mid-1990s, M&M's had lost their icon status.

Mars invented the recipe for M&M's during the Spanish Civil War, when Forest Mars Sr. saw soldiers eating pieces of chocolate covered in a candy coating, which prevented them from melting in the sun.

There was a huge demand for the candy in the US during World War II and the brand soared in the decades following, with new flavors and limited edition holiday packs. The long-running "Melts in your mouth, not in your hand" tagline was introduced in the 1960s - highlighting their unique selling point and boosting popularity further. Such was the US success, that M&M's were rolled out internationally in the 1980s. 

But by 1995, momentum had flatlined. Mars called upon ad agency BBDO to try to revitalize the brand.

Susan Credle, BBDO's creative director at the time, told Business Insider: "They'd become just candy. An aisle store candy brand versus an icon brand."

BBDO set about changing that, but it had another challenge upon its hands: The agency was only given a budget of around $30 million - to include all the strategy, media buying, and production work - nowhere near the ad spend of iconic brands like Coke and Pepsi.

M&M's

M&M's

The "comedic ensemble" that is M&M's.

But the simple ideas are often the best ones - and the ones that don't need a billion dollar budget. BBDO's idea: Take the colors of the candies in the bag and develop each into a character to make a comedic ensemble.

Credle describes M&M's as the "court jester" brand - when the king is getting slaughtered, the jester comes in to lift them up. 

Along came Red (the sarcastic one,) Yellow (the simple one,) Blue (the cool one,) and Green (the sexy one) - and later, Brown and Orange, too.

The reason Green originally wore Go-go boots

M&M's Green

M&M's

Credle recalls a funny story about Green, her favorite character to write for.

"We gave her white go-go boots because we couldn't figure out how to give her ankles," Credle said. All the early drawings made Green look as though she had shapeless, tree trunk legs - not in-fitting with her seductress character. Finally the creative team hit on the idea of giving Green go-go boots to wear instead.

"The CMO was like: 'Go-go boots, that's Nancy Sinatra, that's way too far back'," Credle said.

"So I went down to Madison Avenue - where go-go boots definitely were in fashion in 1996 - and took back a pair of white boots I saw on sale right then and said: 'There you go."

Nowadays Green (and Brown, the other female character) occasionally slips into a pair of heels too - the strap of her shoes appears to hide the lack of ankle.

"Dream big" 

M&M's world

Editor5807/Wikimedia Commons

The interior of M&M's World, Leicester Square, Westminster (borough), London, in March 2012.

While BBDO aimed to return M&M's to iconic status, Credle said the team could never have foreseen how big the brand could go. The team introduced the characters during the Super Bowl, where iconic brands play, but the biggest "aha" moment happened a couple of years later when the first M&M's store opened up on the Las Vegas Strip, next to the MGM Grand, in 1997.

"That's when we knew it would be huge," Credle said. "It taught me that in your career you should dream big. You can do amazing things." There are now five M&M's Worlds across the globe.

Merchandising followed and Credle and her team began teaching people worldwide "how to write for Blue or Red" on everything from Christmas tree lights to birthday cakes. 

The characters became such celebrities that BBDO experimented with pulling them away from TV ads every now and then "to stop them being taken for granted." People immediately began asking where the characters went.

Not everything went like clockwork along the way. Credle had an idea of running three TV commercials with three different celebrities at the same time. 

Susan Credle

Leo Burnett

Susan Credle, the creative brains behind the M&M's characters.

"I thought everyone would go: 'Wow, M&M's got big.' But what happened was, because of the media mix, every saw just one, once. So there was no water cooler moment at the office the next morning," Credle said. "It taught me to respect when everyone shares an experience there's far more value than [the trend] right now of targeted marketing and unique experience. There's much more value if it's shared and talked about. Big ideas cross media in their own right."

Credle no longer works with BBDO - she's now the chief creative officer another ad agency, FCB - but she says she still gets excited when she walks past an M&M's store and sees her characters come to life once again.

This year, M&M's was back at the Super Bowl once again.

The brand was estimated to have generated $580 million in sales in the US last year, topping the chocolate candy market in the region, according to Statista.

A 20-year-old idea with a tiny media budget helped turnaround M&M's from a potential flop to becoming America's favorite candy. 

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