
Unilever-owned Welly, known for targeting millennials and
their kids with colorful bandages and other healthcare products, has teamed with ‘90s TV icon Tiffani Thiessen (“Saved by the Bell,” “Beverly Hills, 90210”) to launch the
Happy Campers Kits. You can think of them as “care packages” for both campers and their parents.
The kits will go on sale at Welly’s web, June 1, as a limited-edition
product. Indeed, just 75 of them will be available, Welly tells Marketing Daily. They’ll cost $74 each because the American Camp Association (ACA) reports that 74% of kids are brave
enough to try something new while at camp, the brand says.
Welly says it will donate $150 to the ACA’s “Send a Child to Camp Fund” for every kit sold. For 75 kits, that
totals $11,100, but Welly actually plans to donate $25,00.
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The “Happy Campers Kit” comes in a 30-inch-wide trunk containing over $400 worth of merch, a bunch of which are fellow
Unilever products. These include SmartyPants vitamins for kids, and Liquid IV powdered hydration drink and Olly Sleep supplements for both kids and their parents. Olly, like Welly, was co-founded by entrepreneur Eric Ryan, also the co-founder of Method
products, now owned by SC Johnson.
Non-Unilever brands in the kit include Peace Coffee (for the adults).
To promote the “Happy Campers Kit,” Thiessen, Welly and the ACA
have been running social posts, and Thiessen has been telling such publications as People and Motherly about sending her own 13-year-old and 8-and-a-half year-old off to sleepaway camp
this coming summer.
Thiessen, said to have curated the kit in collaboration with Welly, states on the kit’s webpage that “any parent’s biggest worry in sending their kiddos
off to sleepaway camp is that they might get hurt. Sadly, we can’t prevent that from happening, but working with Welly to prepare kids and parents for physical or emotional wounds has helped
lessen those little worries.”
Before developing the kit, Welly and the ACA say that they conducted a focus group of camp directors to explore solutions and coping
strategies for kids’ homesickness and parents’ “kids
ickness.”
“The group discussed the value of seeing camp as a milestone for children
and encouraging parents to view it as an opportunity for growth, too,” they said in a press release.
“Summer camp is a beloved tradition and formative
childhood experience,” Stephanie Moats Leibke, Welly’s vice president of brand, said in a statement. “It's where kids encounter setbacks, face obstacles head-on, and emerge with
skinned knees and strengthened spirits.”