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- KFC is a busy place in Japan in December, and daily sales can go up ten times their usual daily sales.
- And to get a ‘KFC special Christmas dinner’ means ordering weeks in advance or standing in queues for hours.
- And it has been like this since the early 1970s.
- KFC opened in Nagoya, Japan, in 1970 and one day, its manager, Takeshi Okawara, overheard a couple of foreigners talk about how they missed turkey for Christmas.
- Turkey was not available anywhere in Japan (it is still imported and not readily available), so Okawara thought a fried chicken dinner could be a good substitute for turkey.
- So, he introduced a bucket of “Christmas Chicken” and started promoting it as the “party barrel”.
- In 1974, KFC launched a national “Kurisumasu ni wa kentakkii!” (Kentucky for Christmas!) marketing campaign.
- The campaign promoted the idea of bringing hot chicken home to families, an idea that resonated well with people thanks to the cold Japanese winter.
- There was no tradition of Christmas in Japan — even today, less than 2% of the Japanese population is Christian.
- So, this campaign not only brought about the ‘awareness’ of the celebrations on Christmas, but it also said, “this is what you should do on Christmas”.
- So, “Christmas=Kentucky” got firmly fixed in people’s minds.
- Around 11 million people are estimated to eat the same fried chicken meal each year on Christmas in Japan.
- Takeshi Okawara, the Harvard-educated manager, climbed through the company ranks and served as president and CEO of KFC Japan from 1984 to 2002.
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Image courtesy of Aleks Dorohovich through Unsplash
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