After Rich J recently discovered the true source for his free Winterthur Subbuteo team, I was today able to shed more light on a previous post of my own.

When I wrote the article well over six months ago, I'd barely heard of the Esso badge collection, yet as if to prove I wasn't alone, thousands of you have been visiting this website to find out more about those shiny club crests yourselves.
And if you count yourself as one of that band of loyal and inquisitive souls, you're in luck because just today I've unearthed further evidence as to how those badges were marketed back in 1971.
As you can see from the two adverts shown, Esso, 'The Action Station', made a good job of promoting their shiny embossed badges to an audience of kids who would have seen these ads in their weekly comics. All the information was there to feed the excited juvenile mind: 76 metallic badges available FREE, some illustrated in all their glory, with the opportunity to pick up a collector card to display them on as well - also FREE.

But the cleverness of the marketing didn't end there. With all the nous of anyone that collected cigarette cards in their youth but failed to complete a set, the Esso ad men also reminded kids that they should look to their peers for help in completing theirs.
That's why this second print ad also appeared with the wonderfully cheesy cut-out-and-wear badge that invited other kids to 'Stop me & swop one'. By wearing the badge on your lapel, you'd have that assured feeling of someone that would soon be completing his Esso collection while also looking like a demented glam rock bus conductor.
The Esso Collection of Football Club Badges - a wonderful piece of football memorabilia, brilliantly marketed.
(Advert images reproduced by kind permission of combomphotos)