MasterCard has scored a potential own goal in its attempt at portraying itself as a purveyor of social good as its social media campaign to provide thousands of meals to children missed the target with some on social media.
In an attempt at creating empathy with football fans, the credit-card brand has announced that for every goal scored in the World Cup and any further completion over the next two years by Lionel Messi or Neymar, it will provide 10,000 meals to starving children.
Goals that changes lives: for each goal scored by Messi or Neymar Jr. Mastercard will donate the equivalent of 10,000 meals to @WFP to fight childhood hunger and malnutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean #TogetherWeAre10#StartSomethingPricelesshttps://t.co/URfIp77ElNpic.twitter.com/Ckq61oJgld
— Noticias Mastercard (@MastercardLAC) May 31, 2018
However such a gesture has led several high profile social media users, including football writer Henry Winter and former England striker Ian Wright to criticise the gesture.
Through Twitter, Winter questioned why the brand didn’t just feed the children rather than create a marketing campaign out of it, while Wright questioned how the idea was sanctioned in the first place.
Why not give them the meals anyway.... https://t.co/90TkyxpsLc
— Henry Winter (@henrywinter) June 1, 2018
Easily the worst marketing I’ve ever seen . This seriously got through the different levels of management, and you all said go ahead https://t.co/uPbGU9VH0H
— Ian Wright (@IanWright0) June 2, 2018
Other elements of the campaign will see the equivalent of one school meal donated by MasterCard for each is of the #JuntosSomos10 campaign hashtag, and a further 10 meals supplied for every donation made through the website.
In a statement, MasterCard explained: “For each goal scored by Lionel Messi or Neymar from now until March 2020, Mastercard will donate the equivalent of 10,000 meals to the World Food Programme to fight childhood hunger and malnutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean.”
Messi was also quoted of his involvement: “I’m proud to be a part of this campaign that will help change the lives of thousands of children in my country and other regions of the world.
“I hope this initiative gives as many smiles as possible to all the children.”
Many on Twitter debated the efforts, either cynically believing that it was not a subject that should be included in marketing, or standing up for the brand for at least addressing the issue of child poverty.
At the time of writing no one from MasterCard had responded to The Drum for comment on the criticism.