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Subway’s New Ad Steers Sandwich Chain in New Direction

In a post-Jared world, restaurant chain focuses on heritage.

Pedestrians pass a Subway restaurant on Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, U.S., on Thursday, August 27, 2015.  Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

In the world of marketing, when in doubt, companies love to go back to the beginning.

That’s the plan for Subway, which unveiled a new ad campaign for 2016 called “Founders.” It highlights details about massive restaurant chain’s co-founders Peter Buck and Fred DeLuca, who started a fresh sandwich shop in 1965 at a time when fast food and frozen dinners were becoming dominant forces in the food industry.

Subway is employing a popular marketing campaign that many brands have tried before: talk about the heritage and original purpose of the company. Often times, that message can be lost or muddled after decades of ad campaigns, gimmicks and in this case, a recent scandal. Marketers tout a back-to-basics mentality to press the reset button.

“We were fresh before it was fresh to be fresh,” the ad proclaims. That’s a bid to perhaps hitch a ride to the prevailing fresher ingredients pitch that has been made by Panera (PNRA), Chipotle (CMG), and other fast-casual chains.

The full ad can be viewed here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hg1bZXUQZUQ

The Subway campaign debuted during NFL programming this weekend, AdAge reports, and also is representative of an investment in a brand that has been hit by the twin worries of slowing sales and a PR nightmare after former pitchman Jared Fogle was ensnared in a child-sex case. Fogle was sentenced to 15 years in prison in November. Subway only got around to officially cutting ties with Fogle in August.