2 Hours in Line for a Free Hat

2 hours ago 2

Claude set up at the Air Mail cafe/design shop, handing out free “thinking caps” (literally hats that just say thinking) and free coffee this weekend. People waited 2 hrs in line, on one of the nicest Saturday’s of the year.

It’s one of those ideas that feels tiny at first but somehow captures everything about what good marketing should be.

When I told my flatmate, he said: “I don’t understand why anyone would wait in line for a free hat on A SATURDAY?” To me, it’s obvious. For a certain type of person, this is exactly the kind of thing they want to be part of.

And since I can’t stop thinking about it, I’m writing about it. I want to explain why this is a 10/10 campaign & what it says about why marketing feels cool again.

First off — here’s how it played out:

Claude’s X account posted this:

Then Sam from the Anthropic team posted this:

Their main post got around 360k views, but Sam’s version hit 2.1 million views. Claude has 144k followers, while Sam has 16k (stats from today).

Same campaign, same idea, but through a human lens.

To be clear, the “10/10” rating is something I just gave with no real data behind it, but let me try to make my point by simply showing the comments and quotes.

  • As per Sam’s updates, the hats were going quick:

  • Keshav got a hat after waiting 1.5 hours in line and said he’s switching from OpenAI to Claude “on vibes alone.” The vibes did look on point. There were more posts on the lines and about making a switch to Claude.

  • Someone even said they were flying in just to get the hat. I don’t believe everything I read online, but honestly I feel like Alejandro will actually post an update on Monday saying he did.

It seemed people were happy to wait in line.

They waited, took pictures, posted on social, became one of the cool kids, and now have a deeper appreciation for Claude.

It reminded me of going to a concert. You’re not just there for the music or the free hat in this case. You’re there to be part of a moment, to say “I was there,” to share it with others who get it. The waiting becomes part of the story. In fact, waiting 2 hrs makes the hat more valuable than if Claude just mailed it to you. The effort itself becomes the experience. The photos prove you were in on it.

Claude simply created an experience people wanted to be a part of.

  • Humans > Brand. It’s all about humans and less about brands. Sam’s post created the buzz, not the official brand account. It was fun, casual, all caps — more so like something you’d send to a friend. People don’t want corporate accounts, they want real humans.

  • Micro-Moments. I guess people in NYC do have a thing to wait in line but this was a brand creating a cool IRL moment. A funny point is how much this is an ‘‘offline’’ event for a tech company. A free hat and coffee in a small cafe sounds simple, but it creates something people want to be a part of.

  • Community without the Buzzword. People lined up, posted photos, shared their hats, and joked about it online. “Community” gets thrown around so much it barely means anything anymore but somehow, Claude actually did it. They just created something people wanted to be a part of. Another point worth nothing here there weren’t any ‘‘influencers’’. Most brand activations rely on influencers but instead it was people from the team that posted about the event.

  • Soft Sales. There’s no “Try Claude Now” button not on the hat, not on the post. The kind of brand people talk about without being told to.

  • Design. The hats are cute and minimal, they’re not hugely branded. No cringe “AI-powered future” tagline on the contrary Sam’s post says ‘‘SAY NO TO SLOP’’. I think people will actually wear this hat.

It’s personal, cultural, and creative. It’s less about selling, more about sharing.

Claude didn’t just give out hats + coffee. They created a story which people wanted to be a part of.

Turns out that’s all it takes to get people to wait 2 hours in line for a hat.

P.S: Yes, I used Claude to help me edit this post.

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