Monday, November 10, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Roastbrief US
  • Campaign
  • Agency
  • Entertainment
  • Innovation
  • Marketing
  • Metaverse
No Result
View All Result
Roastbrief US
  • Campaign
  • Agency
  • Entertainment
  • Innovation
  • Marketing
  • Metaverse
No Result
View All Result
Roastbrief US
No Result
View All Result

How a Milwaukee Ad Agency Outsmarted Hollywood

SRH has been named to Fast Company’s World’s Most Innovative Companies for producing the breakout indie film Hundreds of Beavers

Roastbrief by Roastbrief
April 2, 2025
in Agency
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
How a Milwaukee Ad Agency Outsmarted Hollywood
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Being named to Fast Company’s annual list of World’s Most Innovative Companies of 2025 doesn’t usually fall to a small ad agency in Wisconsin. But, thanks to the foresight to see a potential hit in a black-and-white, shoestring budget independent, mostly wordless comedy film about a 19th Century beaver trapper taking on angry bands of rodents, Milwaukee agency SRH got some deserved recognition.

Last week, Fast Company named Milwaukee-based ad agency SRH (Sabljak, Ravenwood, Hogerton) to its World’s Most Innovative Companies list. Ranked No.10 in the Film & Television category, SRH now shares the stage with Disney, Pixar, and Netflix.

The indie agency now stands aside its bigger list peers because it produced the black-and-white indie sleeper hit Hundreds of Beavers—a film initially deemed “too difficult to market” by distributors—and taking a bold, unconventional approach to its marketing.

With just a $37K marketing budget, SRH turned Hundreds of Beavers into the hottest indie event of the year. Fast Company called it “a kind of Rocky Horror Picture Show for Gen Z” and credited SRH’s wild, unconventional campaign—including costumed characters, live stunts, and raucous Q&As—for its breakout success. 

“It’s bleak out there for indie filmmakers, and most of their movies go straight to streaming without any chance of breaking through,” said Kurt Ravenwood, head strategist and creative director at SRH. “Everything we do at SRH is about helping under-the-radar brands gain traction, so when traditional distributors balked at putting a black-and-white, dialogue-free indie film in cinemas, we knew we could create the momentum needed to find our audience.” 

The agency also landed coverage in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Empire, while fueling social buzz with viral parody posters, some shared hundreds of thousands of times.

The results? Hundreds of Beavers was named #4 Best Indie Film of 2024 by the LA Times, ranked among the year’s best by The A.V. Club and RogerEbert.com (4/4 rating), and defied industry odds—where only 3% of micro-budget films turn a profit—by fully paying back its investors.

A highly non-traditional approach

Fast Company cited SRH’s bold, non-traditional approach to distributing and marketing for the film. With such a small budget, SRH needed to build a brand from scratch, help get people into the theaters, and maximize awareness to spark word of mouth. In other words, no easy feat. 

The effort started with a roadshow throughout the upper Midwest. People in beaver costumes wrestled before the start of the movie, street buzz was created, audience participation was highly encouraged, word of mouth grew, and ticket sales rose. Chaos marketing met fans online, unpolished platform native content was shared many-fold, merchandising built a cult following fanbase, and a holiday push excited Blu-ray fans. Fans, including celebrities like David Cross and Alton Brown, championed the movie on social. 

“We approached the film like we do any brand: find something distinctive and then make sure it gets noticed over and over again until it feels familiar and inescapable,” said Matt Sabljak, partner and president of SRH. “That’s how you make a weirdo silent film ‘made by a bunch of nobodies in the Midwest,’ as one journalist said, more alluring to a wide audience—make it seem both totally unique and totally familiar at the same time. That’s our bread and butter with brands.” 

The results were beyond what the filmmakers thought could happen. $5.1 million in earned media, 11.7 million organic views, 4.6% blended engagement, and $1.3 million in sales with only a $37,636.19 paid media spend spelled success for the little beaver film that could. IndieWire dubbed the marketing effort “the gold standard of micro-distribution.”

The film, which debuted Jan. 26, 2024, hasn’t left theaters and keeps booking new screenings.

SRH is a Milwaukee-based full-service creative agency that integrates strategy, creative and media, leveraging its proprietary tool, The Cogs of Marketing Effectiveness, to deliver insights into brand health.

Founded in 2014 by Matt Sabljak, Kurt Ravenwood, and Sam Hogerton, SRH has worked with brands including the Green Bay Packers, Harley-Davidson, Sargento Cheese, and Nature’s Way. The agency’s Emmy-winning work with Children’s Wisconsin has raised millions in funding for pediatric mental health. 

View the case study of the film here or review the full case study and marketing efforts on SRH’s website here.

Tags: agencyMilwaukee Ad
ShareTweetPin
Previous Post

ANDYs Live + Some Winners Announced

Next Post

Even/Odd Expands Team with Addition of Senior Executive Producer Alli Maxwell 

Related

Lorraine Woods appointed Chief Investment & Operations Officer at Atomic 212°
Agency

Lorraine Woods appointed Chief Investment & Operations Officer at Atomic 212°

November 7, 2025
Celio Ashcar Jr.: “There’s no On without Off — communication today is fully connected and boundless”
Agency

Celio Ashcar Jr.: “There’s no On without Off — communication today is fully connected and boundless”

November 7, 2025
UNIT9 reimagines the aesthetic of speed for Formula E’s new Gen4 era
Agency

UNIT9 reimagines the aesthetic of speed for Formula E’s new Gen4 era

November 7, 2025
Sugar Film Production Celebrates 25 Years – Adds Director Ben Orisich to Roster
Agency

Sugar Film Production Celebrates 25 Years – Adds Director Ben Orisich to Roster

November 7, 2025
Epoch Films Signs Director Tore Frandsen for U.S. Representation
Agency

Epoch Films Signs Director Tore Frandsen for U.S. Representation

November 7, 2025
Abandon Editorial Welcomes Award-Winning Editor Scott Butzer
Agency

Abandon Editorial Welcomes Award-Winning Editor Scott Butzer

November 7, 2025
Next Post
Even/Odd Expands Team with Addition of Senior Executive Producer Alli Maxwell 

Even/Odd Expands Team with Addition of Senior Executive Producer Alli Maxwell 

Sign up and get more benefits

Create a user account at roastbrief.us and get new benefits for free on our platform
  • Get the latest articles in your email
  • Manage your favorite content
  • Enjoy exclusive content just for you

Roastbrief is a digital media with global presence that seeks to share knowledge and updates about the creative industry.
Privacy Policy
Send your press releases to: press@roastbrief.us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Campaign
  • Agency
  • Entertainment
  • Innovation
  • Marketing
  • Metaverse

2023 Roastbrief is a digital media with global presence that seeks to share knowledge and updates about the creative industry. Privacy Policy Send your press releases to: press@roastbrief.us

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.