This was really brought home to me today when I tried to sign up for a new promotion run by Tropicana in the UK, giving consumers the opportunity to collect cheap dining vouchers. A few weeks ago they distributed flyers to thousand (if not millions of households across the UK) inviting people to go to a URL and input a promotional code to collect your first point for free (additional points can be collected from the purchase of Tropicana juice and smoothie packs). There was just one slight problem... somebody seems to have neglected to mention that URLs after the domain name become case sensitive! This means that thousands of people who would otherwise have participated when receiving the flyer have probably just given up (if they are as web savvy as the person responsible for the copy). This is the kind of mistake that just shouldn't be allowed to happen. Thankfully, for the web savvy users, it is a case of just changing it around to lower case and "hey presto, it works!"
However, it does beg another question... Why do Tropicana want users to go to www.tropicana.co.uk/foodlovers when they then re-direct the user to the site: www.tropicanafoodlovers.co.uk? Surely it would have been just as easy just putting that URL in the promo materials - and avoid the case scenario in the first place...
UPDATE: Unfortunately it gets worse. When you try to register you get the following response:
Have agencies and brand owners just given up on quality control? I don't know, but there are too many mistakes in this campaign for my liking...

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