Dunkin’ At Home and BBH USA prove why simple campaign design still wins

The new ‘Iconic Home’ campaign strips back the noise to a single, clever visual, reminding us that the smartest campaign ideas are often the simplest.

Dunkin’ is no stranger to cultural status. Its pink-and-orange branding is instantly recognisable on high streets across America and beyond; however, the brand hasn’t always enjoyed the same prominence when it comes to at-home coffee.

Now, a new campaign developed by PSOne for The J.M. Smucker Co., led creatively by BBH USA, sets out to change that with radical simplicity. The concept behind Iconic Home is so straightforward that it’s almost surprising nobody thought of it sooner.

A clean pack-shot of Dunkin’ coffee is cropped at just the right angle to resemble a house. Set against bold gradient skies, the visuals capture not only the idea of bringing Dunkin’ into the home, but also the warm, familiar feeling that comes with it. Seven product variants each feature their own gradient, reflecting the time of day or season best suited to that flavour.

The work will roll out across static and digital out-of-home channels, including Times Square billboards and wild postings, as well as digital and social media. In a market saturated with increasingly elaborate campaigns, this one takes the opposite approach, and we’re all here for it.

The appeal of pared-back thinking

For Josh Williams, director of brand experience coffee at The J.M. Smucker Co., the challenge was clear. He says: “Dunkin’ at home is loved for its unpretentious vibe and coffee that fuels millions every day, but it’s not always the first at-home brand that comes to mind.

“Our challenge was to continue to remind people they can enjoy that same unmistakable Dunkin’ taste at home. This campaign rises to that challenge by using timeless, beautifully crafted design to spark that ‘I can have this at home’ realisation. It’s a simple, elegant solution to a key business objective.”

The elegance of the solution is what makes it so effective, as it strips away clutter, allowing the product itself to do the talking. It doesn’t rely on dense copy, complex metaphors, or cinematic storytelling. Instead, it boils the message down to one striking, memorable image.

Sapna Ahluwalia, group creative director at BBH USA, says: “The power of this idea lies in its simplicity… a graphic pack-shot that conveys the whole message. It is literally just a bag of Dunkin’, cropped at the perfect angle to resemble a house.

“Stripped of clutter, the aesthetic conveys warmth, comfort, and the inviting feeling of home, standing out in a world that’s become visually too much.”

Why simple still resonates

So many brands often go down the route of spectacle in order to compete for attention, yet simplicity is often more effective in building strong mental recall. A viewer doesn’t need to interpret layers of meaning or follow a storyline. They see a Dunkin’ pack, shaped like a house, and immediately get that the coffee that fuels your commute is the same one you can enjoy at home.

There’s a discipline to creating work this pared back because it requires confidence in the brand’s core assets and a willingness to resist over-explaining. For Dunkin, it also leans into the straightforward, democratic character that has always defined the brand.

Of course, there is a place for complex and cinematic campaigns, but sometimes the smartest move is the simplest idea, executed with confidence.

Beyond Dunkin’

There’s a broader lesson here for creative industries. As advertising evolves to meet fragmented audiences across multiple platforms, the instinct is often to over-engineer campaigns, layering ideas to try to cut through the noise. Sometimes, as Iconic Home shows, cutting through means removing rather than adding.

It’s also worth noting that simplicity in idea doesn’t equate to simplicity in impact. This is a campaign designed for scale, from the intimacy of a social feed to the spectacle of Times Square. The consistent design system allows it to stretch effortlessly while staying true to its central concept.

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