Snack Drawer turns Yo-Chi’s water decision into a $355k cultural moment
Instead of traditional purpose messaging, the campaign positions Yo-Chi’s free premium water as a marketing platform.

Snack Drawer has helped Yo-Chi transform a major sustainability decision into a high-impact cultural campaign, turning lost revenue into a measurable driver of engagement.
After removing bottled water from its venues (a move estimated to cost up to $10 million annually), Yo-Chi partnered with Snack Drawer to bring the decision to life through an earned-first campaign, “Bottle Battle”.
Turning sustainability into entertainment
Rather than lean into traditional purpose messaging, the campaign reframes Yo-Chi’s decision to offer free premium drinking water as a bold marketing platform.

The creative centres on a satirical boardroom scenario, where leadership are “furious” that the brand’s water bill isn’t high enough - flipping conventional business logic and positioning lost revenue as a win.
Hannah McElhinney, chief creative officer and co-founder at Snack Drawer, said the aim was to make sustainability more engaging.
“Purpose-led work often defaults to being serious - and that’s where it can lose people.

The leading media trade publication in Australia.
Get our top stories straight to your inbox daily by signing up to our Newsletter
“We wanted to express a strong environmental-led decision in a way that’s entertaining and shareable - because that’s what drives real engagement and behaviour change.”
Built for culture, not just comms
The campaign leaned into entertainment-led storytelling and Gen Z behaviour, including the rise of the “emotional support bottle”, supported by creator amplification and earned media distribution.
In-store, digital screens displayed a live “water bill”, linking the campaign directly to customer behaviour, while a buy-one-get-one-free offer encouraged refills across Yo-Chi’s 70 locations.
The response was immediate, with 50,612 redemptions in a single day, bringing more than 101,000 customers with reusable bottles into stores.
Within nine days, the campaign generated a $355,132 “water bill” in forgone bottled water revenue, turning a sustainability decision into a measurable commercial and cultural moment.
Challenging category norms
Oliver Allis, co-owner and brand director at Yo-Chi, said the campaign was designed to provoke change.
“We hope the noise from this campaign can shake up the industry a bit.
“It’s ridiculous to celebrate losing money, but even more ridiculous is the continued sale of plastic water bottles in settings like Yo-Chi, where there’s a clear alternative.
“Snack Drawer helped turn it into something people could engage with and be part of.”
Top Image: Snack Drawer x Yo-Chi





