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Tesco's Every Bit of Luck Helps Helped Fans Wish Their Team Well

Ahead of England versus Argentina, Tesco introduced Every Bit of Luck Helps, featuring fun, in-store touches to help fans cheer on team England. Inspired by the idea of touching wood to prevent good fortune from being jinxed, Tesco turned everyday fixtures that shoppers naturally touch as part of their experience—like shopping cart handles or grocery item dividers. Beyond, Tesco also set up a solid wooden poster outside its store, removed till 13, and transformed an entire checkout lane into a wooden monument.

Throughout the World Cup, brands have leaned into the fact that sports fans already treat some superstitions as sacred and built campaigns that didn't try to rationalize rituals but celebrate them as proof of devotion.

Trend Themes

  1. Retail Superstition Marketing — Brands are turning fan rituals and lucky behaviors into playful retail experiences that deepen emotional engagement during major cultural moments.
  2. Tactile Fan Engagement — Physical store elements such as handles, dividers, and displays are becoming interactive brand touchpoints that connect everyday shopping with team loyalty.
  3. Cultural Moment Merchandising — Retail campaigns tied to sports events are creating time-sensitive experiences that transform routine purchases into participatory fan traditions.

Industry Implications

  1. Grocery Retail — Supermarkets have space to differentiate through immersive, event-linked store designs that make practical shopping feel more entertaining and culturally relevant.
  2. Sports Marketing — Fan devotion offers a rich platform for campaigns that validate emotional rituals rather than relying only on team sponsorships or performance narratives.
  3. Experiential Advertising — Brands can use physical environments as media channels, blending humor, participation, and sensory interaction to create memorable campaign moments.

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